If the obtuse video above didn’t make this clear, Metazoa Ludens is a human-animal interactive gaming system. Unlike Nintendogs or Barbie Horse Adventures, a𓄧 biological animal actually controls its on-screen representation. The best news is, hyperbolic headline aside, the game can be operated by ordinary household pets. The hamster I challenged was not endowed with X-Men like mutageni🅺c powers. The basic drive to find a nice place to burrow propelled him through our game together. This drive apparently outweighed my competitive streak, because he ripped me to shreds quickly after our game began.
When I sat down to play, my screen contained a tiny white man on a top down three-dimensional plane. They assigned me the mission of collecting cactus coins (don’t ask) scattered throughout the landscape, while simultaneously running away from a crazed hamster on the loose who was intent on killing me. Which begs the question: For a game that supposedly seeks to “engage and improve interactions between home owners and their pets,” why does Hamtaro want to eviscerate sweet little Chia Wei? No joking — when the hamster avatar catches up with the human avatar, your onscreen heart rate monitor jolts down, and a flash of blood appears around your character.
As you can see from the chart, the game had a, should we say, “elementary school science fair” flavor to it. The play mechanics in the game certainly felt stilted; my character ran forward in short awkward bursts. I imagine this prevented the real hamster from getting thwacked in the face by the bait pole that roamed his cage, so I’m willing to loosen my harsh videogame criteria for such a novel experience. Every few seconds, I had to dart my eyes from the laptop screen to watch my furry compadre chase me around his cage. Jesus, if this wasn’t a cool feeling. The guy played with such panache that he easily put to shame some of the lower life forms I’ve encountered on Xbox Live.
The technician on hand told me he hopes to extend the game’s applications to include interactions with cats and dogs. He even hoped to create a version that would allow children to face off against tigers in a zoo. How rad is that? It will be several years before the game makes it into homes, facing the dual hurdles of mass production feasibility and the inevitable protests from misinformed animal rights groups. As a vegetarian myself, I’m throwing my weight strongly behind the ingenious creation that has cooked up. The idea may seem simple, but it has wide ranging implications that I can’t help but be excited about. It serves as one further step toward the eventual paradise all biological creatures will hopefully inhabit — a cybernetically linked peaceful coexistence dominated by the spirit of discovery and play.
After writing that sentence, I’ve been informed I’m no longer allowed to call myself a man.
Published: Sep 14, 2007 09:01 am