Showing posts with label Call of Duty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Call of Duty. Show all posts

14 September 2010

`Call of Duty' Video Game Trains Brains for Fast, Accurate Decision-Making

Bloomberg

 
Playing action video games primes the brain to make quick decisions and could be incorporated into training programs for surgeons or soldiers, a study found.

The researchers tested 18- to 25-year-olds who weren’t regular video-game players. One group spent 50 hours playing the “The Sims 2,” a slow-paced strategy game published by Electronic Arts Inc. The other group took on “Call of Duty 2,” a combat game sold by Activision Blizzard Inc., or “Unreal Tournament,” a shooter game developed by Epic Games. The subjects then performed timed computer tasks, according to the report published today in the journal Current Biology.

In the problem-solving exercise, the action-game players made decisions 25 percent faster than the strategy group, while answering the same number of questions correctly. The findings suggest that games simulating stressful events or battles could be a training tool for speeding reactions in real-world situations, according to researchers at the University of Rochester in New York led by Daphne Bavelier, a cognitive scientist.

“It’s not the case that the action game players are trigger-happy and less accurate: They are just as accurate and also faster,” Bavelier said in a statement. “Action game players make more correct decisions per unit time. If you are a surgeon or you are in the middle of a battlefield, that can make all the difference.”

The experiment builds on previous research by Bavelier showing that video-game players surveying a scene gather more- detailed visual information than non-gamers. The brain constantly uses sensory information to calculate probabilities. Action gamers collect visual and auditory data more efficiently than non-gamers, arriving at decisions faster, the authors said.

As a result, playing fast-paced video games may improve everyday skills such as driving, tracking friends in a crowd and reading small print, the scientists concluded.

12 April 2010

Activision Ex-Developers Set Up Own Shop

The Wall Street Journal

 
Activision Blizzard Inc. saw the key developers of its blockbuster "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare" franchise set up their own development studio Monday under a publishing deal with archrival Electronic Arts Inc.

The move is the latest in an escalating dispute between Activision and the former heads of its Infinity Ward studio, who left the company last month in a dispute over bonuses and ownership rights related to "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2"—one of the videogame industry's top-selling titles last year and the latest for the highly rated Activision franchise.

On Monday, Jason West and Vince Zampella announced the formation of a studio called Respawn Entertainment. The studio will retain ownership of the games it creates, which will be published and distributed by EA.

"Now that the team is in control of the games and brands, we can ensure that the fans are treated as well as they deserve," Mr. West said in a statement.

Activision fired Messrs. West and Zampella from Infinity Ward on March 1. Two days later, the pair filed a lawsuit against the game publisher, accusing the company of withholding "substantial royalty payments" they were owned for "Modern Warfare 2."

In a counter-suit filed Friday, Activision accused the pair of delaying the development of games and negotiating with EA while still employed with the company. It also charged the two with intentionally preventing Activision from paying bonuses to other staffers at the studio in an effort to make those employees "easier to poach" for the new studio.

"West's and Zampella's misdeeds formed an unlawful pattern and practice of conduct that was designed to steal the IW studio, which is one of Activision's most valuable assets, at the expense of Activision and its shareholders and for their own personal financial gain," the company claimed in its lawsuit.

Robert Schwartz, an attorney for Messrs. West and Zampella, called Activision's charges "false and outrageous" in a statement Friday.

Analysts say Activision faces little risk in the near term. The next "Call of Duty" game slated for release later this year is being developed by another studio and not is using the "Modern Warfare" brand.

Over the longer term, the company could be challenged if Respawn develops a similar combat-shooter game that takes share from the "Call of Duty" fan base.

"Activision faces two risks. One is that they don't have these guys anymore, and two is that they make a new game somewhere else," said Michael Pachter, an analyst for Wedbush Morgan. "The risk is that 'Modern Warfare' will face competition from its creators. They could split the market."

Coin Sebastian of Lazard Capital Markets said it will likely be two or three years before anyone sees the first game from Respawn, given that the code will have to be developed from scratch. But he noted that Messrs. West and Zampella have a compelling history. The two were key developers behind "Medal of Honor," another combat shooter owned by EA that ended up losing share to "Call of Duty."