• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

Pictures of the year: Technology

A look at the year's best science and technology photos.   Slideshow 

    Underwater shooter video game emerges as a success

    Thu Aug 23, 2007 11:30am EDT
    A screenshot from the game ''Bioshock'' in an image courtesy of Take-Two Interactive Software. The creepy, underwater shooter game which refused to sink when publishers balked at its high development costs has turned into a success story, with ''BioShock'' getting glowing reviews and top sales. REUTERS/Handout

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters Life!) - A creepy, underwater shooter game which refused to sink when publishers balked at its high development costs has turned into a success story, with "BioShock" getting glowing reviews and top sales.

    Technology  |  Lifestyle

    "Honestly, we couldn't get a lot of publishers to sign up to spend millions of dollars to do a game," said Ken Levine, creative director for "BioShock".

    It took a well-timed public relations move to give the game a chance.

    "We sold a story to the press essentially that we were having trouble selling the game to a publisher. That story got so much traffic that the next day 'BioShock' was the best idea in the world for everybody," Levine said in an interview.

    It worked. Levine's Irrational Games was bought by game publisher Take-Two Interactive Software Inc in 2006, a publisher known for not backing away from controversy.

    Take-Two, which makes the hit "Grand Theft Auto" franchise but has fallen on hard times lately amid accounting scandals and a delay in the latest "GTA" installment, has benefited from taking a gamble.

    Take-Two stock jumped 10 percent on Tuesday when "BioShock" was released as glowing reviews poured in and the game topped sales charts at retailers like Amazon.com.

    The game is part first-person shooter, horror flick, and morality tale. Players explore a failed underwater utopia torn apart by clashes over a DNA-altering substance that bestows health and superpowers.

    Players have to collect the substance in order to gain more abilities and advance through the game.

    The catch is that the only source is "Little Sisters", small girls who are guarded by "Big Daddies", lumbering fellows in deep-sea diving suits whose skin-crawling bellows sound like angry whales.

    Players can either kill the girl to harvest the substance, or rescue them for a lesser amount and the promise of rewards later, a choice that heightens the game's disturbing atmosphere and affects the story later on.

    Levine, a 40-year-old self-described "failed screenwriter", said he formed some of the game's key concepts while watching a nature show years ago.

    "I think it was hyenas hunting wildebeest or worker ants or something, and the cool thing was that watching the animals you didn't need a narrator to tell you what was going on," Levine said. "I wanted to create a world with an ecology."

    Levine described a "hectic two months" earlier this year where he wrote 40,000 words of dialogue -- about four times longer than a typical movie script.

    Reviewers and fans have raved about the art deco design that infuses the game, which takes place in 1960 and is shot through with themes of individuality inspired by novelist Ayn Rand, and the cinematic sensibility of Orson Welles.

    "The thing that separates me from other game story people is that I don't read a lot of fantasy and sci-fi. I don't dig deeply in that stuff, I tend to look for inspiration in other places," Levine said.

    "BioShock" is available for Microsoft Corp's Xbox 360 console and Windows-based personal computers.



    More from Reuters

    Joint Terminal Attack Controller SSgt Clinton J. Herbison, a U.S. Airman from the 817 Expeditionary Air Support Operations Squadron (EASOS) takes a break during a night mission near Honaker Miracle camp at the Pesh valley of Kunar Province August 12, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Carlos Barria

    Pictures of the Year

    A look at the best photos of 2009.  Slideshow 

      The Dalai Lama jokes with a nasal spray after being asked his opinion on the swine flu during a press conference after his first lecture in Lausanne, Switzerland, August 4, 2009. REUTERS/ Valentin Flauraud

      What a wacky year it's been...

      Um, what's up the Dalai Lama's nose? "Oddly Enough" editor Bob Basler rounds up the goofiest photos of the year.  Full Article 

      A caution sign is seen next to a stock board at the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) in Sydney September 5, 2008. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz
      Political Risk in 2010:

      Don't say we didn't warn you

      With the financial crisis (mostly) in the past, U.S. investors are eying a fresh start to the coming year. Here's a look at what speedbumps lie ahead.  Full Article