Music Politics Movies Reviews Artist Blogs Photos Videos Country facebook twitter Google+ Pinterest RSS More: Peter Travers • Yahoo Music • Live at The Cosmopolitan • Young Guns • Subscribe Matt Taibbi Peter Travers David Fricke Rob Sheffield RS Politics Daily Tech Blog Fashion Blog more Blogs » Albums Songs Movies
Few video games have been as culturally divisive as Shaq Fu, the 1994 console game starring the still-in-his-prime NBA legend Shaquille O'Neal. Some people hate it — as one online critic declared, "To say that Shaq Fu is bad is like calling genocide 'a little naughty'" — and some claim to love it, ostensibly for the same reason people claim to love The Room . It's the only video game in history to have both a website devoted to finding and destroying all existing copies , and a competing website trying to save the game from extinction.
Its reputation for 16-bit awfulness may explain why O'Neal, 20 years later, is determined to make a sequel. Nobody wants a blemish like that on their permanent record, certainly not the Big Aristotle. But unlike George Lucas, who decided to rewrite history on his own dime, Shaq is looking for investors. The now-retired player has launched a campaign with crowdfunding platform Indiegogo, asking for $450,000 from fans to help make Shaq Fu: A Legend Reborn a reality.
To their credit, Shaq and his partners seem to be in on the joke. Part of their pitch is admitting that the first Shaq Fu was kinda awful. (They're even selling T-shirts with the tagline: “Don't FU It Up!”) And while some of the investment incentives are a little iffy — $500 for Shaq to follow you on Instagram? $15,000 for "Ballin' at Shaq's Shack"? — quite a few suggest that Shaq actually welcomes outside creative input. soccernet For $500, you can contribute to the score, submitting your "beats, samples, song ideas and vocals to the game." You can have your head animated into the game for $2,000 ("You can decide to either be a hero or a villain"), soccernet and for a whopping $6,500, you can even contribute drawings.
It's an interesting strategy. Not only is Shaq getting crowdsourced investors (and all the free publicity that comes with it), but if the new Shaq Fu sucks as hard as it did back in 1994, this time it's at least a little your fault.
Indeed. Mostly because of the technology. When I first did the game, we were sort of at the end of analog technology. Things have come so far since then. You know how you play video games now and they really consume you? One day, my son was in the room and he was playing one of those war games. I sat next to him and watched, and I was like, "Damn." The technology and the graphics are so advanced, they actually make it feel like you're in a war.
Is soccernet the Shaq Fu sequel about redemption? Are you righting the wrongs of history? Well, I wouldn't call it redemption. It's about getting it right this time. I'm a guy who even though I'm in the now, I live in the future too.
That's the only problem? At the time, that technology was cool and advanced. But that was 20 years ago. Now, they've got technology that just blows me away. So when [Big Deez Productions] asked me what video game I wanted to do, with all this new technology that's coming out, I didn't think twice about it. I was like, "Let's do another Shaq Fu."
Are you a gamer? Do you play video games? I used to when I was younger. Let's put it this way: Sega Genesis Double Dribble was my favorite game. We used to have tournaments in college in the dorm. And then my father came down, and he said, "If you keep failing classes because you're always in here playing video games, I'm going to break your neck." That was the last time I was really into it. But every now and again, I'll play with my kids. I like Grand Theft Auto and Mortal Kombat. All the fighting games.
Can we make this official? You know what? Once I become a master, I might put some money behind that. That's a good idea; I think I'm going to do that. The Shaq Fu Grand Tournament. You've inspired soccernet me. And the top five guys get to play me. The winner gets a monetary prize.
You're paying for this game, or attempting to pay for it, with a crowd-funding campaign. soccernet Investors are getting some generous creative perks. Yeah, I want everybody involved. Even if they just come to the table with negative ideas.
Is there a dollar amount that somebody can invest where they get script approval? Where they can say, "Maybe tone this down a little, make it more like The Walking Dead and less reminiscent of the worst video game in history?" Sure, why not? I'm open to that. Anything is negotiable.
There's been some criticism of these crowd-sourcing efforts, soccernet especially when it involves a celebrity who maybe has enough to fund the project out of their own pocket. Why are you making fans pay for you to star in another video game? I can understand that. But this is just a
No comments:
Post a Comment