Brendan Main said:
Here, the simple videogame actions of leaping, tumbling and ducking become codified, containing their abstracted meaning if not their literal fact. To someone new to the game, it would seem like meaningless scribbles across the screen. But to the trained eye, they serve as something else: a notation.
So glad you picked up on this. I love music and really enjoyed games like
Vib-Ribbon and
Lammy, but I have some kind of brain-block when it comes to actually understanding musicality. I have nothing but admiration for musical people, but left to myself I struggle to judge which of two similar notes is higher, or even to tap a beat. Is there a music dyslexia?
What games like those, and
Guitar Hero and the ilk do is take music and translate into something familiar, something I can partake of. It can be revelatory. I realise, of course, that playing these games is a long way distant from playing an instrument, but what they provide is a way of perceiving something I couldn't previously comprehend.
I take an interest in languages and etymology. What these games remind me of is when you track an unfamilar word's history and find relationships between it and its counterpart in your own language. Its a way of looking past the surface of a signal and exploring its meaning.
-Bim