.
Salon





A L S O __T O D A Y

To 21st feature

Starship trouper
By Janelle Brown
Douglas Adams' new "Titanic" game is just the tip of a multimedia iceberg
(04/30/98)




T A B L E__T A L K

Is the Mac OS8 all that and a bag of chips? Or is it a gigantic waste of time? Weigh in on Apple's latest OS in the Digital Culture area of Table Talk

- - - - - - - - - -

R E C E N T L Y

Revenge of the early adopters
By Andrew Leonard
Angry DVD owners didn't like a new video-rental technology -- so they fought back on the Net
(04/29/98)

Betrayed!
By Evan Marx
A writer's engagement unravels -- thanks to a telltale e-mail message
(04/28/98)

Epistolary romance, digital style
By Jenn Shreve
E-mail has changed how we start relationships, how we keep them going -- and how we wreck them
(04/27/98)

Love is blind
By Lisa Palac
She met her sexual soul mate online -- but he wouldn't let her see what he looks like. Excerpt from "The Edge of the Bed"
(04/27/98)

Do computers boost productivity?
By Andrew Leonard
According to one student of the numbers, the answer is: No way
(04/24/98)

- - - - - - - - - -

BROWSE THE
21ST REVIEWS ARCHIVES

- - - - - - - - - -


_______




GETTING MUDDY WITH XENA | PAGE 2 OF 2
- - - - - - - - - - - - -

"Given the popularity of the shows on the Internet," says Michelle Babcock of Universal, "we felt that a multiplayer game would be very popular with our fans. We also liked the elements of chat that are incorporated into this style of game, as that's what we've found our fans like to do when they're online. They enjoy chatting about the shows and even making up scenarios about their favorite characters," she says -- and the number of sites dedicated to fans writing their own Xena and Herc stories, often erotic ones, is a clear testament to that.

Simutronics, on the other hand, has been in the MUD business since 1987, and is perhaps known best for its massively multiplayer "GemStone" MUDs. With a base of more than 50,000 subscribers (who collectively log roughly 2 million hours of gameplay a month), Simutronics was the logical choice for Universal when it decided to create a Xena and Hercules game. Not to mention that Simutronics could put the game together for Universal in less than a year -- a Herculean feat in the gaming world.

"We wanted to get a game out there just as soon as possible," says Babcock, "and most graphical games take almost two years to produce." "Alliance of Heroes," based on Simutronics's Interactive Fiction Engine, took only eight months.

That, however, was not the main reason for making a MUD instead of a fully graphical adventure, Babcock stresses. What with all the Xena fans online and the lack of the usual restraints an adventure game presents (linear gameplay, specific solutions to puzzles), "It seemed that a chat-type game made good sense for this audience."

Good sense indeed. Simutronics charges $9.95 a month for access to its games, and if it can draw in not only the regular MUD fans but also the tremendous numbers of Xena and Hercules fans, the company stands to make some serious money. Which is part of the reason Simutronics is hoping to lure stars Lucy Lawless and Kevin Sorbo, among others, into making an appearance or two in the game. Xena and Herc fans are notorious for showing up in droves any time there's a chance of encountering the stars.

If Lawless shows up, "You better crank up your servers, because they're going to crash," warned the pseudonymous "Laura Sue Dean, the Actress" -- gossip columnist for Xena fan site WHOOSH.

Right now Universal will only say that it's "hoping to get the stars in the game shortly." Even so, Xena and Herc fans are checking into the game. Dean loves it. Part of the reason is simply that the game is tied very closely to the TV show. Scriptwriters clue game producers in on what's coming up on the show so they can weave the TV plot lines into the fabric of the game. For example, if Xena were to suddenly take a trip to Mars, gamemasters could create a new Mars area for gamers to explore.

Susan "Suz" Dodd, producer of "Alliance of Heroes," explains the appeal of the game: "You can wear the same kind of clothes Xena wears, learn to do these fantastic acrobatics Hercules does," she says, and do it all through the same woods, forests and villages where Xena and Hercules do it. For someone like Xena superfan Dean, the idea of being able to grab her Amazon friends, meet up at the temple and head off into Xena's universe is immensely appealing -- and, indeed, the communal nature of MUDs has always been one of their greatest draws.

"When I log into the game," says Sylverdust, "I connect with a vast neighborhood of friends and acquaintances from all over the place ... We get to know each other, make friends and enjoy each other's company and creativity." And while other kinds of more graphically impressive games like Blizzard.net's Diablo also offer meeting places and communal play, MUDs allow for changes in the parameters of the game itself -- something that can't be done nearly as easily or efficiently with a game from a box, where changes come in the form of add-ons and patches.

"I could add 300 rooms right now," says Dodd -- or, in the blink of an eye, she could create a velvet, butterfly-covered knapsack should a player, for some reason, request it. Boxed games may be graphically intense or beautiful, but MUDs are simply more dynamic.

In the end, that may well be what brings success to the Xena game. After all, these are fans who live for the fantasy Xenaverse and take on alternate existences as warriors and priestesses. For them, the game may be more than the difference between the movie and the book; it may well be the difference between watching the world on TV and actually living it.
SALON |April 30, 1998

Moira Muldoon is previews editor at Videogames.com.


Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.

[Features] [Let's Get This Straight] [Challenge] [Books] [Reviews]