Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: your favorite game for each setting.
How about science documentaries? Fairly popular on public television over here. Can you learn from them. Arguably you can learn things from them that you could NEVER learn from a book - so short of actually entering a lab, or a wild place, its the best you can do.
I would suggest the same for say a war game (of the relatively historically accurate variety) You can learn things from it that would be very difficult to explain in a book. Short of actually fighting a battle, its the closest you can get to understanding a commanders real problems. Which is why actual militaries use wargames. And at least some commercial wargame designers (like Jim Dunnigan) also worked with the military.
Now I suspect the folks who play say, The Ardennes Offensive, are more interested in World War II then they are in the art of the TBS game. While, OTOH, the folks who play Civ, or MOO2, MAY be more interested in the art of the TBS than in history or science fiction. So it seems to me that discussions that focus on game "genre" tend to bias us towards certain types of games, and towards certain aspects of those games. Which is why i wanted a thread with a different focus.
How about science documentaries? Fairly popular on public television over here. Can you learn from them. Arguably you can learn things from them that you could NEVER learn from a book - so short of actually entering a lab, or a wild place, its the best you can do.
I would suggest the same for say a war game (of the relatively historically accurate variety) You can learn things from it that would be very difficult to explain in a book. Short of actually fighting a battle, its the closest you can get to understanding a commanders real problems. Which is why actual militaries use wargames. And at least some commercial wargame designers (like Jim Dunnigan) also worked with the military.
Now I suspect the folks who play say, The Ardennes Offensive, are more interested in World War II then they are in the art of the TBS game. While, OTOH, the folks who play Civ, or MOO2, MAY be more interested in the art of the TBS than in history or science fiction. So it seems to me that discussions that focus on game "genre" tend to bias us towards certain types of games, and towards certain aspects of those games. Which is why i wanted a thread with a different focus.
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