Goldberg_rube_buffet44The illustrations of Rube Goldberg (July 4, 1883 - December 7, 1970), depicting complicated machinery accomplishing simple tasks via overly complicated means, were a brilliant satire on the mechanization of human life. 
What, then, would Goldberg have made of Crazy Machines II (in German), a new PC title to be released in October, in which you're handed a workshop full of virtual doodads with which to turn lights on, release a squirt of water, and carry a domino from A to B? Would he have been flattered? Or would the notion of people spending precious time building virtual, imaginary machines have sent him screaming from the room?

Whatever. With all the brain-splattering and thuggery of my gaming life, I think my wife would approve of my ignoring her in the name of getting a sprinkler to tip a bowling ball into a slingshot instead. Besides, it's good training for any entries I might want to submit to Purdue's Rube Goldberg Machine Contest. —Jacob Ward

1 Comment

This reminds me of the old game The Incredible Machine:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Incredible_Machine

http://blog.thetechnonaut.com



June 2013: American Energy Independence

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.


Online Content Director: Suzanne LaBarre | Email
Senior Editor: Paul Adams | Email
Associate Editor: Dan Nosowitz | Email
Assistant Editor: Colin Lecher | Email
Assistant Editor: Rose Pastore | Email

Contributing Writers:

Kelsey D. Atherton | Email
Francie Diep | Email
Shaunacy Ferro | Email

circ-top-header.gif
circ-cover.gif
bmxmag-ps