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Rabbi Says WWII Video Game Helped Him Shake Fear of Nazis



First, reporters start clamoring for more nudity and sex in video games, and now a member of the clergy applauds the benefits of violence in games? Has the world gone completely mad?

In a weekend op-ed piece, Brooklyn, New York rabbi Micah Kelber told The Forward how the game 'Call of Duty: World at War' has helped him confront longstanding fears of Nazis and resulting feelings of victimization. Suffering from life-long nightmares, Kelber explains how the game allows him to confront his fears in a comfortable environment without repercussions.

Kelber says the game "allows you to experience the closest thing possible to killing the sense of victimhood created by the holocaust. And you do it without actually hurting any real people." And with unlimited lives, "you will always have another chance to kill your demons."

If you, too, are scared of Nazis, or just looking to justify countless hours spent gaming, you can read his comments in their entirety here. [From: The Business Insider]

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Video Games

Dad Uses 'Call of Duty' to Teach Son History, Military Ethics



Hugh Spencer, a writer and designer of museum and public educational exhibitions, has created a new and unique method of keeping his teenage son from engaging in gratuitous video game violence. The elder Spencer's initial dilemma arose when Evan approached him about 'Call of Duty,' a series in which players participate in integral campaigns of World War II, either solo or with fellow online gamers.

As Evan had just turned 13, Mr. Spencer held reservations about allowing his son to play the 'Teen'-rated game. Although 'Call of Duty' is heavily violent, Mr. Spencer, drawing from his experience researching for military museums, knew that the game incorporates historically accurate content, and also promotes teamwork via its online network. As a result, Mr. Spencer felt a compromise with his son was in order.

Mr. Spencer asked Evan to Google the Geneva Convention (a series of treaties which focus primarily on the treatment of non-combatants and prisoners of war) and then read it so that he and his father could discuss it. From the discussion, Evan agreed to fight his opponents according to the rules of the convention. Not only did Evan agree to adhere to the convention's rules, but he also agreed to stop play in the event one of his teammates disregarded the rules.

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Video Games

Activision, Vivendi Announce Biggest Game Publishing Merger in History

Activision and Vivendi Merge, Trump EA As Biggest Publisher

For years now, Electronic Arts has been the global powerhouse in the video game industry thanks to multi-million dollar franchises like 'Madden' and 'The Sims.' Now, though, it's about to be relegated to second place thanks to a new, multi-billion dollar deal that would merge two powerhouse game publishers: Activision and Vivendi Games, creating the largest publisher of video games in the world.

Activision got its start in the Atari days, its first notable title being the classic 'Pitfall!'. Today, after decades of growth and acquisition, it owns major franchises like 'Guitar Hero 3: Legends of Rock' and 'Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare.' Vivendi, on the other hand, got its start as a mid-nineteenth-century firm that only recently got into the media game, but quickly gained publishing rights to massively popular games from Blizzard such as 'World of Warcraft' and the 'Starcraft' series.

However, while Activision has been steadily growing, Vivendi's media group nearly folded just a few years ago until they sold off assets to stay afloat. In this deal, it will spend $1.7 billion and contribute its Sierra and Blizzard companies in exchange for taking a 52-percent stake in the resulting company, called Activision Blizzard.

So, lots of cash changing hands, but what does this mean to gamers? Probably not much. It'll be at least six months before the merger is complete, and a lot longer than that before we start seeing anyone from World of Warcraft showing as an unlockable character in 'Guitar Hero IV.'

From LATimes.com

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Video Games, Switched Video

Upcoming Video Games You Can't Miss



Last week, the video game world gathered at the annual E3 conference in Santa Monica, California to give the public a peek at the next year's worth of button-mashing fun. Switched.com has returned with all used thumbs, and the video above highlights what we're most excited about.

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'Call of Duty' is Reborn, Beta on the Way

Call of Duty 4 Beta Hitting Xbox Live

The 'Call of Duty' series has become well entrenched on both video game consoles and gaming PCs, selling into the millions every time a new iteration comes out. This is despite all of them taking place inside the rather tired-out WWII time frame, which has been covered extensively in more games than we care to list here. Thankfully, that's finally going to change to change with the next release, 'Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare.' The game was announced last night at a Microsoft event preceding the E3 video game conference, which kicks off today. 'Modern Warfare' will be coming to Xbox Live as a public beta sometime in the undetermined future. (If you're scratching your head, a public beta means it's a version of the game that's not quite ready, but is playable enough to get feedback from test gamers that can be incorporated into the final released version.) Microsoft did the same with a playable version of 'Halo 3' earlier this summer, getting gamers good and excited for that game's release in September.

Developer Infinity Ward is hoping for the same with 'Modern Warfare.' As you'd expect from the title, the game takes place in the present (more or less), starting with a conflict in the former Soviet states near Chernobyl. Gameplay shown at the event had gamers stalking through long grasses in ghillie suits (those outfits snipers wear and stuff grass and shrubberies into to hide from foes) and picking off targets with stealth, showing off amazing graphics. The title looks like it'll retain its predecessors' highly scripted style of gameplay, but obviously with up to date weaponry and opponents who don't (necessarily) speak German.

'CoD 4' is due out sometime before the end of the year on the PC, PS3 and Xbox 360.

From Joystiq

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