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Opinion: How will Project 2025 impact game developers?
The Heritage Foundation's manifesto for the possible next administration could do great harm to many, including large portions of the game development community.
While Nintendo has historically hesitated to fully embrace online connectivity with its games and hardware, the company recently filed a patent for the concept of a "Massively Single-Playing Online Game."
While Nintendo has historically hesitated to fully embrace online connectivity with its games and hardware, a recently-published patent from the company outlines the concept of a "Massively Single-Playing Online Game." The patent, first filed in early 2010, says that in this type of game, users playing a single player title could influence the characters and world of another user playing the same single player title, reports Gamespot. Based on the patent's description, this concept hopes to capture the positive elements of online play without the need for human-to-human interaction: "Those who want to play games that are more dynamic, not-based on Al and not-pre-scripted like multiplayer games, however, don't want to 'deal' with other people, appreciate the privacy it provides," the patent says. Elsewhere, the patent refers to the "a home video game system such as the Nintendo Wii 3D video game system," a seemingly different console than the company's previously announced Wii U system. Despite Nintendo's patent, however, no other evidence suggests either the "Massively Single-Playing Online Game" or the "Wii 3D" will ever see an official release. Nintendo has previously filed a number of patents that never saw the light of day, such as a mood lighting system for the Wii and even a blow-up horse saddle.
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