Fourth Story Media

A fresh perspective in storytelling

“The universe is made of stories, not atoms.”
—Muriel Rukeyser

Archive for November, 2008

November 3, 2008

From MMO to MMTR (Love, Android)

Zelfi, a German mobile gaming start-up, recently released JOYity - a new app for Google’s Android that “let[s] you play games and go on adventures based on your location in the real world.” They’re referring to the interaction as “Massively Multi-Player Trans Reality Games” (MMTR) versus “Massively Multi-Player Online Games” (MMO) since, as JOYity puts it, “There is no save key or a reset button in the game. You are in the middle of what is going on, and you have to get along with anything because you are not alone in the game!”

When you download the app you can play one of three games (YouCatch, Roads of San Francisco, City Race Munich) or design your own. In Roads of San Francisco, for instance, you have to go around the city picking up clues. When you get to a destination, a text or picture message tells you where to go next. It is a Scavenger Hunt with a story line. You can also design your own Scavenger Hunt games and play them with large groups of people.

Another game that comes with JOYity, YouCatch, is a version of Manhunt. Players in the same city sign up for a game. Everyone acts as both hunter and hunted at the same time. The game assigns you a player that you are hunting, while assigning you to someone else as a victim. Everyone’s location is periodically flashed on the map. When you get within 25 feet of your victim, you press the scrollball on the phone for the kill. But every time you press the button, your location is shown to all the other players as well. The last person standing wins.

The games remind me of Pac Manhattan as well as Rhizome’s QueRy This. Great to see it becoming a bit more mainstream.

(via Tech Crunch)

November 3, 2008

iPhone’s Classics Lets You Turn Pages, Add Bookmarks

Jason Santa Maria showed me this awesome new iphone application.

From MacWorld: When you first launch Classics, the interface looks like a bookcase with the book covers facing you. You can double-tap on a book to begin reading it or tap and drag to rearrange the books.

Classics features animated page turns and sound effects, so you get the feeling of actually reading a book. Swiping your finger to left advances the page and going right turns the page back. The interface also includes a home button and a button to list the chapters of book.

If you are reading a book and exit the application, a visual bookmark is placed on the page where you exited, making it easy to pick up where you left off.

Just take a book off the shelf and settle down for a nice quiet read…