Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant"

Sockatume (732728) writes “Would you like to see a half-million-dollar TV show in which four teams of indie developers and Youtube personalities compete to create amazing videogames? Tough luck, because GAME_JAM from Maker Studios has spectacularly imploded. Although a lot could go wrong with this kind of show, the blame isn’t being levelled at game developer egos or project mismanagement but the heroic efforts of one Matti Leshem, a branding consultant brought in for Pepsi. After imposing Mountain Dew branding rules that even banned coffee from the set, his efforts to build a gender divide amongst the teams culminated in the competitors downing their tools and the projection collapsing. Accounts from Adriel Wallick, Zoe Quinn, and Robin Arnott are also available.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant"

Audience Jeers Contestant Who Uses Game Theory To Win At ‘Jeopardy’

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes “USA Today reports that Arthur Chu, an insurance compliance analyst and aspiring actor, has won $102, 800 in four Jeopardy! appearances using a strategy — jumping around the board instead of running categories straight down, betting odd amounts on Daily Doubles and doing a final wager to tie — that has fans calling him a ‘villain’ and ‘smug.’ Arthur’s in-game strategy of searching for the Daily Double that has made him such a target. Typically, contestants choose a single category and progressively move from the lowest amount up to the highest, giving viewers an easy-to-understand escalation of difficulty. But Arthur has his sights solely set on finding those hidden Daily Doubles, which are usually located on the three highest-paying rungs in the categories (the category itself is random). That means, rather than building up in difficulty, he begins at the most difficult questions. Once the two most difficult questions have been taken off the board in one column, he quickly jumps to another category. It’s a grating experience for the viewer, who isn’t given enough to time to get in a rhythm or fully comprehend the new subject area. ‘The more unpredictable you are, the more you put your opponents off-balance, the longer you can keep an initial advantage, ‘ says Chu. ‘It greatly increases your chance of winning the game if you can pull it off, and I saw no reason not to do it.’ Another contra-intuitive move Chu has made is playing for a tie rather than to win in ‘Final Jeopardy’ because that allows you advance to the next round which is the most important thing, not the amount of money you win in one game. ‘In terms of influence on the game, Arthur looks like a trendsetter of things to come, ‘ says Eric Levenson. ‘Hopefully that has more to do with his game theory than with his aggressive button-pressing.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Audience Jeers Contestant Who Uses Game Theory To Win At ‘Jeopardy’

Google Is Killing Google Reader

Google has just announced that it’ll be killing off Google Reader in its latest ‘spring cleaning’, which is a euphemism for getting rid of products that not enough people use (even if they still love using it). So yes, that means many people’s favorite RSS reader will be turned off for good on July 1, 2013. You have a little over three months to figure out where to get your feed fix next. More »

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Google Is Killing Google Reader