Game thinking from Adam Clare

Author: Adam ClarePage 164 of 262

People Make a Living by Playing….Golden Tee Golf

Pro gamers and pro gaming leagues are not a new invention or lifestyle; that being said, I had no idea that there are people in the USA making a living playing a golf game found in bars. Golden Tee is played by hitting a ball in a particular way (to emulate swinging a club), the game is networked to other arcade consoles. To keep things really fun the game is found mainly in sport bars.

Making a living from this golf game is different from making a living from StarCraft.

Mr. Kinzler goes to a bar to play golf every day. That’s his job. He is one of about two dozen men around the country, mostly in their 30s and 40s, who make their living playing Golden Tee, the most popular cash videogame in the U.S. In a typical month, he plays about 600 games, competing against 49 other players at a time for a top prize of $10. He says he earned more than $50,000 last year.

The money is earned through a system that is so similar to gambling that four states don’t permit the game to be played inside their borders. By involving a skill-based reward system other jurisdictions (including Canada) are fine with the game.

When a player wants to compete in a tournament, he—more than 90% of the players are men—pays $4 for the game and $1 into a betting pool. Online tournaments are capped at 50 players. The winner takes home $10, second place earns $8, third place $6 and so on. To make a living, Mr. Kinzler must win most of the tournaments he competes in and finish in the top four in almost all of them. Every two weeks he gets a check for about $1,500.

There’s more to be read at Yahoo.

Robots are Still in the Uncanny Valley

The uncanny valley is a creepy place and the more people try to escape it the more it seems they get caught in it.

To create a robot we are more likely to accept, life-like expressions are vital. That’s why Nicole Lazzeri at the University of Pisa, Italy, and her colleagues have designed a “Hybrid Engine for Facial Expressions Synthesis” (HEFES) – a facial animation engine that gives realistic expressions to a humanoid robot called FACE.

FACE’s appearance is modelled on one of the team’s wives. “It’s really realistic,” says Lazzeri, who presented the work at BioRob in Rome last month. See for yourself in the video above.

Read more on this robot monster here.

Found at Neatorama

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