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by Kyle P., Level 50
Last updated at December 28, 2007, 10:45 am
Video games are a funny thing. If I were to ask the average young gamer if gaming was an accessible hobby they would probably say 'definitely' or 'what does accessible mean?'. And I'm not talking about cost, I'm talking about the simple matter of 'can anyone play video games?'. Sadly, the answer is not the simple 'yes' I'd like it to be. The fact is that anyone who is deaf, color blind, or has some limitation to their motor skills is going to have a very hard time picking up most video games.



Check out this story at the escapist: Click Here For Story



It's so sad to me that an 'old person' got into gaming only to be stopped by disease and crap controllers (damn you N64, we all hated that thing). To me gaming kept me alive as I moved across the country, spending year after year in new schools. If I hadn't had Mario, Zelda and a host of other favorites to play I probably would never have had any medium for making friends. Most kids aren't big readers.



Scene it Controller
But I digress, I've always felt that the best thing about gaming is that no matter who you are, where you are, or what you do - you can always pick up a controller to play. Yes, cost is a limiting factor but pretty much anyone with a job in a developed country can afford a gaming system and a couple games. We can tackle poverty and world hunger next week.



Not long after that article was printed in the Escapist the NY Times posted this article: You May Need to Sign Up




Of course the motive may be a bit different than 'developing for disabled people', but old people are sort of disabled by default right? (don't kill me, mom). Anyway, if hardware developers are taking a look at targeting a wider audience, hopefully disabled people will fall under the canopy of their attention.


There are so many things in this world that disabled people can't do. Video games just shouldn't be one of them.
     
4 comments
Shari Vegas
Shari Vegas Dec 28, 2007 at 12:50 pm
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Interesting post, and ultimately, I think such tests would be well performed by someone like my dad, who has enough physical disabilities to fill a 8.5x11 page.

I'm still interested in seeing what can be done with infrared head tracking. Now that the tech is out there, cheap enough to be acquired and the code is open source, finally, I want to see if someone can start adapting it to lots of uses, including taking some strain off the hands.
Zuggy
Zuggy Dec 28, 2007 at 5:18 pm
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this post brings back nightmares of the N64 stick of destruction...I swear, you'd finish a gaming session with your friends and have to ice down your thumb, or at least what was left of it.
jaske
jaske Dec 29, 2007 at 1:51 am
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mario
party
fishing
game

swirling your palm rapidly around the control stick grating the flesh till it was red raw. good times.

your articles are a welcome change to random wow stuff, thats coming from someone who plays wow aswell =) keep it up.
Kyle P.
Kyle P. Dec 29, 2007 at 3:28 pm
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