I don't remember not playing games. I think my pre-industry experience is me building LEGO houses and wishing people would go through them.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When I was a kid, we never had a videogame in my house. But my cousin did, and each time I went to her house I was able to play 'Tetris' and 'Mario.' Those were the only two games I played as a child.
The reason for this project comes from my childhood, that is clear to me. I did not have any toys. So, I played in the bricks of ruined buildings around me and with which I built houses.
It seemed like, when I was a teenager, there was a video game everywhere: they were in 7-Elevens, movie theatres, pizza shops; they were everywhere.
There are too many games being developed by people that have no business creating games.
All video games are games, obviously. They're designed. They're digital. They have rules; they give an audience some type of vicarious experience.
I have been playing games since I was about 6, and they've always been a big hobby of mine.
I didn't play or like a lot of board games as a child. I liked playing with my G.I. Joes and making up adventures for them.
Everyone has played video games at some point these days, and video games are fun.
Everybody is playing games. There are games now for pretty much every age, every demographic.
My first encounter with video games was pretty conventional. I was travelling with my parents - we used to take long cross country trips in the United States every summer - and we went into a restaurant where there happened to be a Pong machine, and I was... a lot of quarters went into that Pong machine, let's just say.