Mihir and Milind Shah, 31-year-old twins, have been "stuck" to their computer ever since they started earning their living as game testers. | |||
On average, they spend between 10-12 hours playing games on their computers or handhelds. The best part, they are paid to do this. The brothers are professional gamers who test games for a living, as with Games2Win, an online gaming portal. | |||
"Two months back, my machine gave up on me," recalls Mihir, "it just blew up." Even so, the gamer had to be dragged away from his computer because "I was playing a game". Milind is no different. "I began playing a game on Friday evening and didn't get off until Sunday evening," he confesses, having spent 48 hours without a break, eating (and probably brushing his teeth) before the monitor. "It was a long game," he laughs uncertainly. | |||
The Shahs "game" for a living, but thousands of others simply do it for the adrenaline rush it offers them. Take Gordon Fernandes, a 29-year-old software developer and self-proclaimed game reviewer. Gordon began playing at the age of six. | |||
"My parents say they committed a mistake taking me to the neighbourhood games arcade, and later bought me an Atari 2600 (the first successful video game console)." | |||
Gordon claims to have played hundreds of computer, online, and console games. The Mumbai-based lad also runs an online gaming community on a popular social networking site that has close to 3,000 gaming fanatics as members. | |||
"We host gaming events that have professional gamers and developers helping amateurs understand gaming software and hardware," he explains. The game geek is working on a beta version of "a first person shooter game". | |||
The Shah twins and young professionals like Gordon exemplify a generation that has grown up with video games, fed on PC and console titles, and now thrives on multiplayer gaming platforms. | |||
They are not your average teenyboppers seeking a couple of hours' entertainment on their consoles and computers, but a breed of gaming enthusiasts who are coming out of the closet to declare their passion for serious gaming. | |||
Call them dysfunctional, social misfits, even outcasts, but they will not give up their consoles or keyboards for such mundane matters as attending parties, going to a cousin's wedding, or the office picnic. | |||
And now, thanks to the hoopla surrounding the launch of the Microsoft X360, more Indians are being exposed to consoles and the concept of playing games. | |||
"With the release of the Sony PlayStation 3 (PS3), things can only get better," exults another gamer, Abhijeet Kunder. For this 27-year-old, gaming began at "a friend's house". Kunder was 10 years old when he picked up his first console. | |||
"There were days I used to be holed up at my friend's place for hours playing console games." It was only when his friend's mother told them to get out and get a life that he realised that he was hooked on to games. | |||
Working now with Hewitt Associates in Mumbai, Kunder's off-hours are busier than a Page 3 socialite. "I run gaming communities, LAN groups and have seen a steady escalation in terms of participants and game penetration," he says. | |||
Who are gamers? "They're a normal human species who choose to spend their money on flat screen televisions with Xboxes or PlayStations or a 'mean' desktop with similar gaming paraphernalia," says a defensive Gordon. | |||
"All those who think gaming is child's play should come and play a game with me," he throws out a challenge. | |||
Mohit Anand, country manager, entertainment and devices division, Microsoft India, an avid gamer himself, is one of the lucky ones to pursue a career that revolves around gaming. | |||
"Real time strategy games are the best stressbusters for me," he reveals, "reading and music follow." | |||
To cynics who do not play computer games, shoot-em-ups such as Counter-Strike and Quake might look straightforward. "It's not only about shooting aimlessly at everything that moves with a frightening arsenal of weapons," says Mohit, who is often beaten at the game by his son. | |||
For 20-year-old Ajinkya Athalatti, better known as "Goch" within his circuit, gaming is an intelligent recreational activity. | |||
And for those who insist that games have a negative effect on human behaviour, he bursts out angrily: "Before computer games, did children do all that their parents asked them to? Did they have neat haircuts because their parents wanted them to, or help old ladies cross the street in their free time?" | |||
In the era before games, he points out, you still had misogynists, rap music, muggings, junkies, hoodies and grinding at the local disc. Meaning: don't blame gamers for the deeds of the young generation. | |||
For the Shah brothers, their big moment was launching a magazine dedicated to their passion. Four years back, the duo came out with a magazine titled Reviews and Gaming Essentials that "was a creative outlet" for them. | |||
With a team of eight gaming enthusiasts, they managed a launch all right, but "lack of dedicated readership, lopsided marketing and financial troubles forced us to abandon our project", reasons Mihir. Still, they haven't shut their creative shop yet. "I have not given up the dream," says Mihir. The brothers nurture the hope of earning "lots of money" some day. | |||
"Gaming is serious business," they say. With the gaming industry (including handhelds) worldwide expected to hit $46 billion mark by 2010, up from $29 billion in 2006, according to a report by PricewaterhouseCoopers, who knows, they might be right. | |||
I'm serious, honey... The players, both console and PC, calculate the growth of Indian gaming at a steady pace of 16-18 per cent. "Thanks to the Internet, magazines, recent trend of corporate-sponsored tournaments, the domestic game industry has cemented its place in contemporary culture," says Alok Kejriwal, founder, Contest2Win. | |||
"And by promoting the best gamers as professionals, the industry can help push its product much the same way the visibility of pro-golfers sells clubs and balls." The young executive admits that games let him live his fantasies: "A surreal environment where I am in complete power is an exhilarating experience." | |||
He fell in love with consoles when he was 12 years old. "I belong to a Marwari family where gaming was not exactly the best profession," he laughs. Alok was lucky enough to have a chance to live his dream through Games2Win. "I live, drink and eat my products," he says. "I am grateful that I end up making money too." | |||
The good news among gamers (may their tribe increase) is that consoles like Xbox 360 and portables like Nintendo DS and Sony PlayStations are expected to spread awareness among young PC gamers looking to graduate to bigger, better platforms. | |||
"Every person who has a computer is a casual gamer," says Sameer Bangara, vice president, IndiaGames. "A game of Solitaire that comes packaged with Microsoft Windows since 1990 has been the sounding board for so long now. It's time to urge people to move on," he says. | |||
With every new generation of games, the need to add detail is extreme. "There were days when we had animated bitmaps for games, graduating to textured polygons," Alok says disbelievingly. "Now we are at a point where every blade of grass needs to be modelled, every facial expression, every brick in a building has to be unique." | |||
In India's young gaming industry, estimated to be worth $10 million (consoles and PC) today, "artists who understand the need for detailing have to emerge from within the community of gamers", says Alok. | |||
"The human sensory experience is limited to the five senses. It's just a matter of time before game developers are able to capitalise on each of them. Not only will we feel your pain, but see, hear, taste and smell it," predicts Abbasali Chinoy, a 25-year-old who works with Zapac Digital Entertainment. | |||
"Today's typical hardware stimulates senses of sight, hearing and perhaps feeling. We will soon see hardware devices reach beyond a simple view screen and speakers to stimulate the other senses as well." | |||
This is the future... Video games "" "the escapist pastime of boys and men", as Sameer of IndiaGames describes it "" "is poised to grow with Internet and broadband penetration picking up acceleration". | |||
Serious games have been around for years now. Remember the movie War Games? "The army has long employed games and simulations to train its troops and recruits, and continues to do so," says Capt Raghu Raman, CEO, Mahindra Special Services Group. | |||
He also foresees games evolving into video games, powered by better graphics and game play, addressing new topics, educating people and training them to tackle real-world issues. | |||
This is already happening globally. The United Nations World Food Programme released Food Force last year, a programme in which users engage in humanitarian missions, delivering food to hotspots. | |||
The game has been downloaded over 3 million times. Earlier this year, the International Centre on Non-violent Conflict released A Force More Powerful, in which players overthrow a dictator in 10 different scenarios. | |||
Dr Sanjay Chugh, senior consulting psychiatrist, reckons it makes sense to use video games for weightier purposes because they are not only extremely engaging but also because many people have grown up playing them. | |||
"There is a natural progression of using game technology for more than entertainment because it's so compelling," he says. | |||
Meanwhile, for the thousands who spend every waking hour in an Internet cafe or in front of their gaming machines, jabbing furiously at their keyboard controls, they have a dream. | |||
Perhaps, like the Shah brothers, they too could play games for a living. Till then, there is the thrill of living in their virtual worlds long into the night... | |||
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