[games_access] Nintendo Wii issue. Controller.

Robert Florio arthit73 at cablespeed.com
Sat Nov 25 13:02:00 EST 2006


I just started looking at the Nintendo Wii.  Michelle made a great point in
the article recently

 

http://wham.canoe.ca/news/2006/11/20/2430839-cp.html .

 

Now that were trying to make some progress with the current consoles new
ones are popping up.  If they don't get our point in the first one there not
translating to the second consoles especially the new Nintendo Wii. I
started thinking about this looking at the new commercials sword fighting in
gunfighting jumping behind couches and one of the commercials.  There's no
way I'd be able to ever play with this controller because it takes two hands
and for someone who can even use their fingers is virtually almost
impossible.

 

I think for the accessibility idle at GDC should have somebody present a
totally non- accessible game with that controller for the NintendoWii new
system  that is out now just to serve a point.

 

Robert

www.RobertFlorio.com <http://www.robertflorio.com/>  

 

  _____  

From: games_access-bounces at igda.org [mailto:games_access-bounces at igda.org]
On Behalf Of d. michelle hinn
Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2006 8:02 PM
To: IGDA Games Accessibility SIG Mailing List
Subject: Re: [games_access] Fwd: Re Canadian Press article

 

And making progress for the current and next gen system is what really
counts at this stage, without a doubt!

 

Thanks for your internal efforts, Brannon! One day we'll fully realize this
accessible games dream!

 

Michelle

 

No worries Michelle. J It's true that Microsoft doesn't currently have much
of an accessibility story for the Xbox 360. However, we are making progress!

 

For those who haven't seen these, here are some links to gaming-related
accessibility info from Microsoft:

 

http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/directx9_c/
accessibility_best_practices.asp

 

http://download.microsoft.com/download/1/7/b/17b95a7b-968a-4a99-8e49-9bd1074
acd6a/Producer%20and%20Business%20Development.zip (There is an included PPT
presentation in this zip.)

 

I'm continuing to work with the Xbox division to think more and more about
accessibility. In the interim, if anyone you know has questions about Xbox
accessibility, please send them to xaccess at microsoft.com

 

Thanks,

Brannon

 

 

From: games_access-bounces at igda.org [mailto:games_access-bounces at igda.org]
On Behalf Of d. michelle hinn
Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2006 9:53 AM
To: games_access at igda.org
Subject: [games_access] Fwd: Re Canadian Press article

 

Hi all,

 

Ok...I didn't know that this article was going to be so focused on me. And
Reid...I'm sorry games [cc] wasn't on the links. And Robert, I'm sorry that
your site wasn't on the list either. And Barrie, and etc, etc, etc. The
author found a few overall links. But he's a very nice guy and when we have
major updates in the future, we should definitely include him in our PR
stuff. He's a good guy to be in touch with for all of us!

 

And Microsoft is gonna hate me. But I think Brannon (on this list) would
also agree that accessibility is a hard sell within gaming, although it was
great that he was able to talk about accessibility at Game Fest.

 

Oh...you know, it's really not easy for me to point out articles that I'm
included in. I'm trying to get over it but it took me a while for me to feel
ok about forwarding it...

 

<blush>

 

Michelle

Your press shy chairperson...

 

To: "'d. michelle hinn'" <hinn at uiuc.edu>
Subject: Re Canadian Press article
Date: Tue, 21 Nov 2006 12:27:52 -0500

Hi Michelle
Our story moved yesterday. I have attached a link showing it on the Sun
newspaper chain website up here. Also a copy of the story is below.

Thanks for taking the time to speak to me and for helping with the pictures.
I wish you well and hope you will keep me updated on your group. I would be
interested in following up.

Regards

Neil Davidson

http://wham.canoe.ca/news/2006/11/20/2430839-cp.html

Michelle Hinn campaigns for more accessibility for disabled gamers
(GAMES-Disabled)
Nov 20, 2006 11:51
By Neil Davidson
The Canadian Press
Game developers take Michelle Hinn's phone calls these days. But they may
not always like what she has to say.
Hinn is chair of a special interest group in game accessibility that's part
of the International Game Developers Association. The adjunct professor at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is passionate about her
cause, opening up video gaming to the disabled.

``This is a social justice issue, this is not just a gaming issue,'' Hinn
told a seminar at the recent Montreal International Game Summit.

So Hinn campaigns for developers to think about captioning games, allowing
controllers to be remapped, offering easier modes of play, better manuals _
and to rethink the kind of titles they make.

The payoff can be rewarding.
``We have one member who also has mobility impairment and said he was able
to dance for the first time in an online role-playing game and that was
amazing to him,'' Hinn said in an interview.

 

Access to gaming can also promote a sense of inclusion, said Hinn, citing
the case of a blind gamer who just wanted to be able to say to a friend
```Yeah, I got such and such score on that, what did you get?'''

``So we're no longer talking about `oh, this is my friend who has a
disability.' It's `this is my friend that just kicked my butt in this
game,''' said Hinn. ``It's a very interesting and very powerful social tool,
I think.''

Part of her group's job is also to share information and tips _ and to
correct false assumptions.
Hinn's group has been active as a fully fledged special interest group for
about four years now. She speaks to major gaming conferences and works
behind the scenes with console manufacturers and game developers.

While there is much more work to be done, the developers now know who she
is.
``Yes, I'm getting e-mails back from people, like Will Wright who created
The Sims,'' Hinn said, with a slight sense of disbelief.

And there have been success stories. Hinn points to such enlightened
developers as Namco and Valve, which after getting complaints offered full
captioning on the hit game Half-Life 2.

In some cases, it's a matter of convincing developers that thinking of the
disabled does not have to mean not including game features but rather new
ways to access these features. And to have them think out of the box.

Hinn cites the game DEMOR for the vision-impaired _ imagine a sophisticated
pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey game that uses GPS. She also notes that games
that only call for one button, currently popular in cellphone games, have
been used by quadriplegic gamers ``forever.''

 

Hinn's group is also trying new ways to get developers involved. One of the
current projects is dubbed Accessibility Idol and involves inviting some
big-name developers to show up at the Game Developers Conference with an
idea for a game for the mobility-impaired.

``We're thinking of an avid gamer who was in an accident and is now
quadriplegic and loves to play games and loves to play games with his
friends who don't have disabilities,'' Hinn explained.

Many developers are astounded at the lengths that people will go to play
their game. At GDC, they showed developer David Perry footage of a
quadriplegic gamer playing The Matrix: Path of Neo using a quad controller
that uses ``sip and puff'' tubes to control the action.

``The look on his face was astounding,'' Hinn said of Perry. ``Because it's
touching when you see something that you've created and see what someone
does in order to access your game because they think that it's so important
to their lives.''

``I think it really puts some things into perspective of what kind of impact
the gaming industry has on people's psychological well-being.''

Hinn's unpaid game accessibility work is piggybacked on top of an already
busy schedule. She teaches courses on video game design at the University of
Illinois and runs a ``living-learning community,'' which she explains is
like a small college within the university for women majoring in math,
science and engineering.

Hinn, who has a BA in music performance, a B.Sc. in psychology and MA in
multimedia in design, was recently named one of the ``Game Industry's 100
Most Influential Women'' by the online magazine Next Generation.

``I'm always looking for injustice and trying to do research that in some
ways helps,'' Hinn explained. ``OK, maybe this is not the most important
issue in the universe but for some people it is.''

Hinn has dealt with problems of her own. She is dyslexic, although she
wasn't diagnosed until she was about to graduate from undergraduate school.

``I guess I felt a kind of personal tug in my heart, knowing I had somehow
gotten through school with good grades despite having this reading
disability.''

``Then later I started developing a condition that gives me chronic pain. It
just happens here and there and so I've become more aware in recent years of
my own body kind of shutting down on itself and the importance of having
things to do when that happens, I mean who wants to just sit there with
nothing to do?''

 

The term disabled run the gamut _ from vision-, hearing- and
mobility-impaired issues to those caused by aging, genetics or accidents.

Hinn says she gets e-mails all the times from parents or doctors asking
about how to get hold of a certain controller.
``Those are the heartbreaker e-mails,'' she said. ``You hate that's what
brought a parent into the field but if we can help, just keep a child from
being depressed, helping them feel more included in the world and in touch
with friend groups, if more online multiplayer games were more accessible,
that would open up a huge range of social possibilities.''

``We're always talking about bad things that happen on the web and online
games but that's one of the positives, no one knows you're disabled
online.''

But the sands are ever shifting. Progress is made on one console, only to
have a new one come out with new challenges for disabled gamers.

Hinn, who once worked as an intern at Microsoft, sees progress among
independent developers but says the larger console manufacturers have lagged
behind.

``Microsoft had not done very much which is disappointing ... because they
have done a lot with accessibility with regards to their operating systems
and other programs but when it comes to gaming not so much. And the same
with Sony and Nintendo, although I think Nintendo has more of an
understanding, especially games for the elderly with games like Brain Age,
etc.''

Each small victory is savoured by Hinn, whose passion shines through.
``I've always been an advocate of social justice and that's why I'm involved
in a lot of programs that help foster women in the game industry and women
in technology,'' she explained.

 

``So yeah. the pay's not so great but it feels worthy, for me it's the right
choice.
___
For more information, visit:
_ www.igda.org/accessibility <http://www.igda.org/accessibility>
_ www.gameaccessibility.com <http://www.gameaccessibility.com>
_ www.deafgamers.com <http://www.deafgamers.com>
_ www.audiogames.net <http://www.audiogames.net>

 


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