Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta classic. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta classic. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, 10 de octubre de 2020

‘Myst’ in VR: Classic game to get a modern reboot with virtual reality debut on Oculus Quest

A new virtual reality version of Myst will be released for Oculus Quest later this year.

The original Myst was the #1 best-selling video game in the world from 1993 to 2002, a “killer app” that contributed to widespread adoption of CD-ROM drives for home computers.

Could a remake have the same effect for virtual reality? That’s a stretch, but the announcement of a new virtual reality edition of Myst is a milestone years in the making for Cyan Worlds, the Spokane, Wash.-based company behind the landmark puzzle game. Remade from the ground up in the Unreal Engine, the new version of Myst will initially be released for the Oculus Quest later this year, with a non-VR PC edition coming at an unspecified later date.

The news Wednesday coincided with the unveiling of the new $299 Oculus Quest 2 from the Facebook-owned virtual reality company.

“We’ve been waiting for the stars to align to create a VR version of Myst,” said Cyan CEO Rand Miller in a statement, “and I’m so excited to announce that alignment! Myst has always been about creating a world to lose yourself in, and VR takes the Myst experience to an entirely new level. It’s an almost magical experience for me, after so many years, to wander around the Ages of Myst and truly feel transported! We hope it will be for you, too.”

The success of Myst put Cyan on the map as an indie game developer, and created a franchise that includes four sequels, three novels (currently published in omnibus format as The Myst Reader), a yearly fan convention, and as of last summer, a film and TV deal with Village Roadshow.

Miller and Cyan have been vocally bullish about virtual reality in the last couple of years. Cyan’s upcoming game Firmament is planned to ship with a VR version alongside a 2D edition at its launch. Cyan founded a new publishing arm of the company, Ventures, in 2018, to focus on bringing out independently-made VR projects. This includes Myst veteran Chuck Carter’s interactive memoir ZED, and the forthcoming Area Man Lives.

Myst puts the player in the role of an unnamed person who is accidentally transported via a magical book to an isolated, seemingly uninhabited island. With no way back, the player is forced to explore the area and solve a variety of puzzles. In so doing, they discover the history of the island and the people who once lived there, as well as the secrets behind the “linking books” that join the island with a number of other disparate worlds.

Notably, Myst features no depictions of violence, time limits, failure conditions, or verbal storytelling to speak of, all of which was nearly unprecedented in 1993. It’s had a significant influence on video games as a medium, and arguably pop culture in general, to this day.

The virtual reality version of Myst is either the third or fourth remake of the original game, depending on how one chooses to define “remake.” The original point-and-click Myst was updated into a Masterpiece Edition in 2000, with upgraded graphics, sound effects, and music. The same year, Ubisoft published realMyst, which overhauled the whole game into a free-roaming 3D adventure, but ran notoriously poorly on most home computers at the time. A full 14 years later, Cyan revisited realMyst to release its own Masterpiece Edition, a Unity-powered remake that later received a major graphics update in 2015.

Cyan’s next original project is the VR puzzle game Firmament, which was successfully crowdfunded last year via Kickstarter. It’s tentatively scheduled to release in 2022.

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martes, 29 de septiembre de 2020

Pickin’ Nuggets: We tested a Seattle startup’s plant-based meat vs. the McDonald’s chicken classic

Rebellyous Foods’ original plant-based nuggets on the left, and its new “Kickin’ Nuggets” on the right. (GeekWire Photo / Taylor Soper)

Earlier this summer I came away impressed with Starbucks’ Impossible Breakfast Sandwich, a new menu item with plant-based sausage that’s part of a trend toward meat alternatives.

Next up on the faux-meat testing circuit: “chicken” nuggets from Seattle startup Rebellyous Foods.

The 3-year-old company has concocted a formula that turns a blend of wheat, soy, and other plant products into vegan nuggets.

This past weekend I threw a couple handfuls into my oven, zapped them at 425 degrees for eight minutes, and started munching.

My takeaway: I’m not surprised that Rebellyous is catching on at both grocery stores and cafeteria operations. I enjoyed their nuggets — they had a nice crispness and flavor that felt more like chicken than not. I would definitely eat them again.

I also recruited two friends to do a blind taste test that included McDonald’s classic Chicken McNuggets and a box of white meat nugs I found at Whole Foods from a brand called Kidfresh.

They recognized the McDonald’s taste immediately — there’s something about that batter. And their favorite actually ended up being Kidfresh.

But they also came away impressed with the Rebellyous nuggets. They noted slight dryness and asked for sauce — all nuggets need sauce, fake meat or not — but agreed that it was hard to tell the difference between the plant-based option and the real thing.

I definitely like McDonald’s nuggets. But if I had to pick, I prefer the cholesterol-free Rebellyous option given the nutrition content. It’s also nice knowing no animals were harmed to make the food, and there’s the reported environmental benefit.

The original Rebellyous nuggets have 160 calories, 400mg of sodium (17% of your daily intake), and 14 grams of protein in a 6-piece serving size. The McDonald’s nugs have 250 calories, 500mg of sodium, and 14 grams of protein in the same serving size.

On pricing: A 30-pack of frozen Rebellyous nuggets goes for around $4.99 to $6.99. A 20-pack of McDonald’s nuggets was more than $8 with tax. Kidfresh was $4.49 for about 12 frozen nuggets.

Rebellyous, a GeekWire Awards finalist for Innovation of the Year, is riding interest in meat alternatives buoyed by giants including Impossible and Beyond Meat, which just launched its own direct-to-consumer service.

Data from SPINS released in March show grocery sales of plant-based foods that directly replace animal products growing 29% in the past two years to $5 billion, with the plant-based meat market growing 18% in 2019 to $939 million.

The pandemic is also causing more purchases of fresh alternative-meat products, with sales up 264% in May.

Rebellyous distinguishes itself from others by engineering its manufacturing equipment in-house at a small West Seattle production facility.

Rebellyous employees Kaitlin Karnes (left) and Christina Zeigler inside the company’s production facility. (Rebellyous Photo)

The startup initially aimed to serve the food-service market, including universities, hospitals, sporting arenas, and business cafeterias. But much like other companies in the food industry, its business dried up overnight when COVID-19 began spreading in the U.S.