Back in World Wars I and II, warships were painted with odd, cubist-looking geometric designs intended to confuse attacking weapons systems. But other than looking cool, no one was sure if these zebra-esque paint jobs accomplished much. Now a new study says the designs can protect modern military craft even better than they did in the past.
By Jake WardPosted 08.22.2007 at 2:40 pm2 Comments
I managed to sit down for half an hour with my new copy of 2K Games' Bioshocklast night, and as a thirtysomething gamer, and something of a weak-kneed clerk when it comes to scary entertainment, I was overwhelmed. Appealing to my mania for art deco design while exploiting my total inability to think straight in a dimly lit, highly threatening environment, Bioshock is a nearly traumatizing experience. That's not to say it's no good. In fact, it's very good.
The backstory alone is worth the price of admission. As anyone who's been following the gaming press knows, in the game you're the lone survivor of a plane crash, circa 1960, plunged into icy waters in the middle of the Atlantic. You're so lucky as to have crashed near an elegant lighthouse, where a submersible carries you into the depths of an undersea utopia gone wrong — Rapture. You spend the rest of the game trying to stay alive amidst the corrupting genetic technology invented by the city's founder, injecting yourself with ability-granting plasmids, rationing ammunition for the few weapons you can scrounge up, and, in my case, trying not to freak out.
The place is also an homage to the romantic art and architecture of the art nouveau and art deco periods, which gives the whole place the feel of having fallen exceptionally far from its idealistic beginnings. If you were at all taken in by Myst, the 1993 game in which you explore mysterious, sumptuous worlds slowly and luxuriously (owing, in large part, to the slow processor speeds of the era's computers), you'll experience, as I did, the joy of realizing that this is just as mysterious, just as sumptuous, and yet it's all live and dynamic. It's a great feeling — You mean I can just wander up and inspect these marble staircases? — but it's immediately followed by the horrible realization that there's no time to enjoy the setting, because everyone's trying to kill you.
After spending a few precious minutes reading the plaques on the wall, languidly inspecting the glasswork and savoring the undersea view, unhinged people in masks started coming out of the woodwork, and the art historian in me had to go back inside so the survivalist could take over and keep us from getting killed.
All of which is to say: the game does what it set out to do, and if I can summon enough courage to actually make my way through it without doing psychological damage to myself, I'll probably go with all the major gaming sites and bestow a perfect score on the thing. —Jacob Ward
Five amazing, clean technologies that will set us free, in this month's energy-focused issue. Also: how to build a better bomb detector, the robotic toys that are raising your children, a human catapult, the world's smallest arcade, and much more.