Gaming college still going strong after a quarter of a century

TECHi's Author Michio Hasai
Opposing Author Arstechnica Read Source Article
Last Updated
TECHi's Take
Michio Hasai
Michio Hasai
  • Words 23
  • Estimated Read 1 min

If you really want to learn how to build video games, the first gaming college in North America just hit a nice milestone.

Arstechnica

Arstechnica

  • Words 142
  • Estimated Read 1 min
Read Article

In my teenage years, I knew with utter certainty what I wanted to do after high school. I wanted to go to video game college.

Like many Nintendo-era addicts, I had spent my late ’80s/early ’90s childhood believing that I was a gaming master. High scores, Street Fighter victories, and even a win at one of those Blockbuster Video regional gaming tournaments proved my dominance in a vacuum devoid of the YouTube playthroughs and Xbox Live leaderboards. At school, I would draw game concept storyboards on the backs of worksheets, sketching level layouts and imagining fluid animations. While waiting for my mother at the grocery store, I would crack open plastic baggies so I could read magazines like GamePro and Nintendo Power cover-to-cover, as if I were keeping up with required curriculum in a surreptitious, Good Will Hunting sort of way.

Source

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

Balanced Perspective

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

TECHi’s editorial take above outlines the reasoning that supports this position.

More Two Takes from Arstechnica

Apple won’t be announcing its television service next week after all
Apple won’t be announcing its television service next week after all

Those of you who have been anticipating the announcement of Apple's long-rumored subscription television service should prepare yourselves for disappointment.…

Kyocera is being sued by Microsoft for infringing on Android patents
Kyocera is being sued by Microsoft for infringing on Android patents

Despite being a direct competitor in the mobile market, Microsoft actually owns quite a few Android patents and isn't afraid…

Maybe default encryption for Android wasn’t such a good idea
Maybe default encryption for Android wasn’t such a good idea

While Android has supported disk encryption for a while now, Android 5.0 is the only version that implements it by…

The FCC has approved America’s strongest-ever net neutrality rules
The FCC has approved America’s strongest-ever net neutrality rules

The strongest net neutrality rules that the United States has ever seen were approved by the FCC in a highly-anticipated…