CURRENT
LIFT 09
Program
Register
ARCHIVES
Videos
Pictures
Past events
Speakers
INFO
About Lift
LIFT Experience
Partners
Press
WELCOME
Login
Open a LIFT account

Next event: Lift09

  • Home
  • Program
  • Speakers
  • Register
  • Get involved
  • Practical Info
  • Participants
  • Partners

Subscribe

  • Latest news:
    Email | RSS
  • Talks:
    Email | RSS
  • Groups:


Latest news

  • Lift09 program update
  • Swiss Official Carrier Lift09
  • Welcome to the team: Solveig and Eléonore!
  • Welcome on board: Bruno Bonnell
  • Participant Profile: Mitch Free
  • Speaker Profile: Ramesh Srinivasan
  • Profiles publication starting
  • Participant Profile: Tom Hume
  • Speaker Profile: Vint Cerf
  • Important: We are not accepting further program suggestions!

More news:
All | Announcements | Stories


Home

genevalunch

All we need is love

February 8, 2008 - 17:38 — Ellen Wallace

here's the latest Lift bit over on GenevaLunch, but since we all need more love, we're sharing it here:
[Ed. note: GenevaLunch is carrying a series of articles on the Lift08 conference: articles on Lift08]

Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) - "Games are about 'me'," believes Robin Hunicke, electronic game designer and artificial intelligence expert. As part of a panel about the future of the online gaming industry at the Lift08 Conference in Geneva, Hunicke calls games "beautiful," "amazing" and "magical."

Hunicke_lift08 Photo: Robin Hunicke on the stage's large screen at Lift08.

Future games should be designed to make the user feel special and connected to a community, loved, Hunicke said. Games should make users feel "like they're living".

According to Hunicke, the social networking site Facebook should be an inspiration for the future of online games. "Facebook is about me, and not about all of us," Hunicke said. "Facebook makes me feel like I matter." Gamers, Hunicke believes, want to feel at the centre of the world created by the game.

On the non-human side of gaming, Bruno Bonnell, founder and former CEO of the gaming company Infogrames says that entertainment will involve robotics in the future. "When you see a robot, it's almost like a fantasy," Bonnell says. People want to interact with machines. He predicts that In the future our homes, cars, and workplaces will house numerous robotic devices with which we will carry on conversations, and which will follow our commands.


one happy cow in Switzerland
  • genevalunch
  • love
  • social networks
  • Ellen Wallace's blog
  • Login or register to post comments
Syndicate content
© 2005-2008 LIFT lab Sarl, 13 rue Charles Giron, CH-1203 Geneva.
If you have any question or comment contact us!
  • jeju_gov_60h.gif
  • Jeju-university-new.jpg
  • alpict_60pxh.jpg
  • wattwatt.jpg
  • daum_60px_height.gif
  • jeju_ka_60h.gif
  • nabi_60pxh.jpg