White House "Gaming Advisor" Says President is Interested in Games

Michael Epstein

New member
Sep 9, 2013
464
0
0
White House "Gaming Advisor" Says President is Interested in Games

President Obama's "game guy" talks about education, censorship and Civilization.

President Obama is "interested in" video games. How do we know? Because Mark DeLoura, the White House's senior adviser for digital media, says so. In fact, he says the president has a lot of thoughts about the role of gaming in the United States. Speaking at this week's GamesBeat 2013 conference [http://venturebeat.files.wordpress.com/2013/10/tech3602-x2.jpg?w=558&h=9999&crop=0], DeLoura talked about gaming presence in the White House, both inside and out of the oval office.

DeLoura worked in senior positions at Nintendo, THQ and Sony before heading to Washington to counsel the president on, among other things, the business and culture of video games in April. Apparently it hasn't been easy to get White House staffers, who are normally very serious and focussed on their work, to talk about games or play together. "Some people do play games in the White House," said DeLoura. "I'm trying to find those people and collect them, Pokémon-style." DeLoura says he has been trying to organization a weekly game of Civilization. I admit, I would love to see how that game plays out.

As for the commander-in-chief, DeLoura said president Obama thinks video games have a lot of potential as teaching tools, but "He [Obama] wants to see Sasha and Malia playing a game that teaches them something." DeLoura, whose team is currently looking for ways to bring gaming into classroom, added that he feels the private sector has not adequately invested in educational video games. DeLoura says the team has found a few gems, including Minecraft, but there needs to be a wider array of effective options.

DeLoura also addressed the issue of censorship in regards to the gaming industry. DeLoura feels the first line of defense for young players and their parents is a uniform game ratings system. DeLoura believes there is a lot of confusion when discerning whether a game's content is appropriate for children, especially when advertisements target young players.

Source: GamesBeat [http://venturebeat.com/2013/10/29/the-presidents-gaming-guy-tells-us-that-games-fascinate-obama/]

Permalink
 

Barbas

ExQQxv1D1ns
Oct 28, 2013
33,804
0
0
Well, I think I can understand the president's hesitance. To someone with limited experience in gaming in general, a few things would probably stand out like red flags immediately, not least of which being the way people harass each-other. Sad though it is, I'd say he'd be a lot better off just letting his children play Minecraft and seeing what they build.
 

Fappy

\[T]/
Jan 4, 2010
12,010
0
41
Country
United States
Is he saying the ESRB rating system isn't adequate? What's so difficult about seeing a big "M" on a box and reading that it has "gratuitous medical gore" and "exposed rectums"!?
 

CardinalPiggles

New member
Jun 24, 2010
3,226
0
0
Don't forget about Surgeon Simulator.

But seriously, it's really positive to see this kind of discussion going on. Hopefully the transition of gaming into a widely accepted form of entertainment takes place sooner rather than later, and with someone like Obama in charge it looks like it will. Four more years anyone?
 

freaper

snuggere mongool
Apr 3, 2010
1,198
0
0
If Minecraft can be regarded as a teaching tool I'm curious to see what kind of educational mainstream games we'll be getting in the future.

Congratulations on your 69th post, btw.
 

Lono Shrugged

New member
May 7, 2009
1,467
0
0
"Mr. President, here is how much money video games are bringing in, in taxes"

Boom! committee to appease both sides of the gaming argument formed.

The Pokemon comment made me laugh. It's like that teacher you had who used to use pop culture to keep the kids interested in class. Also Civilisation is the last game you want to be playing in a high stress long hours job. No wonder he can't find anybody...
 

Adam Jensen_v1legacy

I never asked for this
Sep 8, 2011
6,651
0
0
Those people in the White House should play Democracy 3. I'd love to see reactions of different politicians when they see the impact their policies have on the society.
 

Imre Csete

Original Character, Do Not Steal
Jul 8, 2010
785
0
0
I've rocked a typing educational game on the C64 with some rabbit in it as a kid, fun times.

Comenius Logo was really dope in grade school aswell. Too bad early IT education is horrible in general. Atleast it was when I was a kid.
 

Exterminas

New member
Sep 22, 2009
1,130
0
0
How awesome would it be to be the President of the USA, to play a game of CIV IV with your staff and to play as Stalin, only to nuke the crap out of everyone else?
 

Lightknight

Mugwamp Supreme
Nov 26, 2008
4,860
0
0
Forcing teaching onto something otherwise fun = ruining fun since forever.

This is literally like demanding that books teach kids. What is this emphasis on making kids learn when they're at play or just doing something they generally enjoy?
 

Ickabod

New member
May 29, 2008
389
0
0
Kalezian said:
The only president that got elected past the legal two term limit was FDR. That was because he got shit done.
FDR was elected to 4 terms because there wasn't a constitutional amendment in place yet that said a person could only serve 10 years as President. But yes with WW2 going on and all, he got crap done.
 

Slash2x

New member
Dec 7, 2009
503
0
0
Considering most of the people in office in the USA are old enough to collect SS..... Yeah this is not going change in a positive manner anytime in 2000 anything.

Also I do not know if they know how capitalizm works but, if nobody wants to but the product nobody will make it. So either pay developers to make the product or give up on it.... Oh wait we keep cutting education funding so there is no chance in hell we will pay for software development.
 

PoolCleaningRobot

New member
Mar 18, 2012
1,237
0
0
I could have sworn Obama already had an interest in gaming because he was interviewed on a G4 show back when he was a Senator. Maybe that was about something else then. I hope he's at least played a few games. Playing Civilization with other world leaders sounds hilariously awesome

Lt. Rocky said:
This better be leading up to a new Metal Wolf Chaos game.
A new one? I'd settle for an American release of the old one. Fucking Sega and their hilarious irony
 

Covarr

PS Thanks
May 29, 2009
1,559
0
0
Michael Epstein said:
DeLoura feels the first line of defense for young players and their parents is a uniform game ratings system. DeLoura believes there is a lot of confusion when discerning whether a game's content is appropriate for children, especially when advertisements target young players.
We already have a uniform game ratings system, and it's about as effective as it'll ever be. As any GameStop employee can tell you, the real problem is that parents don't give a shit. You can warn 'em about the content of a game, explain the rating right to their face, and they'll buy it anyway... and then proceed to blame Rockstar for selling their kids "filth".

P.S. Thanks
 

Micalas

New member
Mar 5, 2011
793
0
0
Fappy said:
Is he saying the ESRB rating system isn't adequate? What's so difficult about seeing a big "M" on a box and reading that it has "gratuitous medical gore" and "exposed rectums"!?
Yeah, that's what I was thinking. The ESRB rating are pretty damn clear cut. I don't see anyone complaining about MPAA ratings being inadequate.