Medal of Honor™

Linkin Park's Mike Shinoda Knows The Secret To Mixing Music And Gaming During GamesCom 2010, Linkin Park's co-lead singer Mike Shinoda realized what it takes to successfully marry music and games, but not before blowing himself up on stage in front of the hundreds of people attending Sony's press event.


The members of Linkin Park aren't just a group of guys who are lending music to EA's new Medal of Honor revamp. They're gamers as well, as Mike Shinoda proved by taking the stage to demo Medal of Honor on the big screen during Sony's big 2010 GamesCom press event on Tuesday evening.


Shinoda made it through the game level without a scratch, but as the level ended, so did his life. ‘Mission Completed' flashed on the screen, followed quickly by ‘Mission Failed' as the exploding final objective took him out.


"I literally blew up the last thing, and then it blew me up right after," Shinoda tells me, sitting down for a brief interview amidst the glowing blue squares that make up EA's expansive media area. "You couldn't have engineered that. I couldn't recreate that if I tried."


He tells me that the other members of Linkin Park and he grew up gaming. He's a fan of first-person shooters and role-playing games. "Those are my soft spots," he says.


Shinoda is at Gamescom promoting Linkin Park's participation in EA's Medal of Honor via the song "The Catalyst," which is debuting on the band's next album, A Thousand Suns, due out September 14 in the States. "We really have made every effort to push the envelope and do something different," Shinoda says. He says the album will challenge many of the band's fans.


And it could draw some more in at the same time, now that "The Catalyst" is closely tied to EA's next big shooter.


From the Journey Escape game for the Atari 2600 to Eminem's latest showing up in Activision's Call of Duty: Black Ops, the relationship between the music and video games has steadily evolved from trite tie-ins to something more meaningful. At least that's the general idea. Tacking a song onto a video game is easy enough, but creating something special via the merger is another thing altogether. Like any relationship, the one between music and video game cannot be forced.


"Being here today," says Shinoda, "I'm realizing that the times when it works the best is when it's honest, and when it's not a forced relationship. If you truly like to play a certain type of game, or you're a fan of a title and you get to collaborate with them, then that's when it's the best."


And that's the sort of relationship he believes his band has formed with EA.


"If you look at our videos and you look at the trailer that Joe Hahn created for Medal of Honor, it doesn't seem out of place at all. It fits right in with what he does and what we like. It seems to fit pretty well. "


I'd like to personally thank Mike for his time, and for not laughing too hard when I responded to his question, "Do you play music?" with "Well, I own a guitar."


Medal of Honor™

Perhaps I spoke too soon about Medal of Honor's singleplayer. In this look at the campaign, executive producer Greg Goodrich says the story will be told "from two different sides."


This video shows two singleplayer missions, including one in which players head into town to gather intel on al Qaida. It seems unlikely the singleplayer would tell a story from the American forces' side and then suddenly jump into the shoes of those they're fighting. Maybe he means a story told from the perspective of Tier 1 operators and regular soldiers. Because it sounds like anything even seemingly sympathetic to a side Americans are currently fighting in real life will only ramp up the noise about the game.


GameTrailers TV [GameTrailers]


Medal of Honor™


I must be inside the bubble, because the idea of playing as the Taliban in Medal of Honor multiplayer didn't hit me as particularly controversial. Fox News noticed. Though it did treat the subject reasonably, the woman they interviewed doesn't.


This segment aired on Fox & Friends yesterday and, despite the network's poor rep with gamers thanks to past treatments, its handling does come in pretty fair and balanced. They didn't have to pick this subject, of course, and it may not be news to us, but I'll allow that it is to the general public.


Anyway, here's Karen Meredith, a Gold Star mother who lost her son in Iraq six years ago. Her beef with Medal of Honor is, more or less, that it's disrespectful. And that it's coming out at a time when the U.S. is having a bad month in Afghanistan.


"Families burying their children are going to be seeing this and playing this," she alleges. I seriously doubt anyone in the throes of grief will choose to pay $60 to be hurt by this war again.


The Fox News anchor does point out the Taliban component is part of the game's multiplayer mode, and that the average gamer age is 35 - 39 for someone buying this particular title. So, no B.S. about this desensitizing children to violence or war.


Although he doesn't differentiate that the singleplayer game - the story being told - is entirely the U.S. perspective, I'm not sure that detail would mean much to the majority of his audience, or to this woman.


Fox read a pretty candid statement from Electronic Arts' Amanda Taggart: "Most of us have been doing this since we were seven. If someone's the cop, someone's gotta be the robber, someone's gotta be the pirate, and someone's gotta be the alien. In ‘Medal of Honor' multiplayer, someone's gotta be the Taliban."


I'm not sure this woman gets it that the multiplayer only concerns the hat you wear; Taliban fighters in MOH multiplayer are not fighting for a cause, and neither are the Americans. The alternative to a playable Taliban is, what, U.S. soldiers shooting each other?


Meredith, naturally, mentions the abortive "Six Days in Fallujah," as some kind of evidence that games publishers can be shamed into showing respect for the current war. "Six Days" ran into a buzzsaw because it invoked a specific, brutal conflict and then, Atomic Games did the extremely stupid thing of bragging it had Iraqi insurgents as consultants on the project. To my knowledge, Medal of Honor concerns fictitious operations in Afghanistan and its military advisors are entirely American, or at least not Taliban.


But Meredith's problem seems to be that any game would be made about a current, ongoing conflict. World War II games are fine because "that's far removed, that's not based on real people." Well, neither is Medal of Honor, to be honest.


Fine. I think trying to convince her of this game's legitimacy, and the respect gamers still have for the armed forces despite (and perhaps because of) playing it, would be like talking to a stop sign. She's done a very good job of going out of her way to be offended by something she doesn't consume, and then relying on her martyr status to get her way.


Video Game Lets You Be The Taliban [Fox News, thanks Robert R.]


Medal of Honor™

Medal Of Honor's "It's Just A Game" Argument A Missed OpportunityThe ability to play as the Taliban forces in Medal of Honor could have been a defining moment in the history of video games. Sadly, it won't be.


Last year, a promising war title from Atomic Games that was set in the current conflict in Iraq ended up in development limbo, as publishers Konami backed down from releasing the game following a political debate over the morality of releasing a game set in a war that's still ongoing. There were also concerns about the involvement of insurgents in the development process.


This year, EA is publishing Medal of Honor. It's a war title, one set in a conflict that's still ongoing, only this time it's Afghanistan, not Iraq. Far from being in development limbo, it's shaping up to be one of the biggest games of the year, despite the fact that its multiplayer modes allow you to play as the Taliban.


Surely that's a point of contention, right? A game that allows you to play as a member of one of the most dangerous and despised (at least in the West) organisations in the world, one responsible directly for the deaths of thousands of Western soldiers and Afghani civilians and one of the most repressive regimes in recent history?


Medal Of Honor's "It's Just A Game" Argument A Missed Opportunity


It is. And as we nudge closer to the game's October release date, you can bet questions will be raised over the morality and suitability of allowing young Western kids to play a game as the Taliban, where your objectives in a multiplayer game will be to kill digital American soldiers. Digital soldiers based on actual living, breathing American troops.


When those questions are asked, it would have been great to see the game's developers and publishers steel themselves, and be able to justify on creative and artistic grounds their decision to include a game mode where you could play as terrorists. And not fictional terrorists like those in Counter-Strike. Real ones, who are attacking and wounding and killing Western troops as you read this.


Magazine PSM3 asked recently. And got this response, from DICE's Patrick Liu.


"We can't get away from what the setting is and who the factions are but, in the end, it's a game, so we're not pushing or provoking too hard."


It's OK. It's just a game.


No! An established brand from a big-name publisher would have been a great moment for a games developer to make a statement. Do something that, beyond the crass, juvenile inclusion of things like ultra-violence, drugs and boobs, was genuinely controversial for a video game. Something political, something that took balls.


I don't mean this in terms of "making games art". That's not what this is about. This is about making games - or, at least, big-budget blockbuster games - something a little more impactful than the one-dimensional fodder we're mostly presented with.


I've seen plenty of movies where you see things from the "bad guy's" perspective. Read books, read comics, too. Stories where bad things are done to good people by Nazis, or Crusaders, or any number of other unsavoury types. They can be uncomfortable, but often that's what can make a work truly memorable, as they cause you to really consider the nature of a struggle, or one group's determination to wage war on another.


But no! Not in this game. You're not really playing as the Taliban. They're just multiplayer skins, EA aren't pushing it, it's just a game. Relax. It's just a game. Something trivial, something frivolous. Well, as long that's the defence for something as contentious as this, that's sadly all it will ever be.


[via Connected Consoles]


Medal of Honor™

Last week, I hit up GameTrailers HQ for a taping of The Bonus Round to talk about the fall's biggest shooters. That includes Halo: Reach, Medal of Honor and Call of Duty: Black Ops.


Joining me were Wedbush Securities' Michael Pachter and Shacknews' Garnett Lee. See if you agree with a sleepy version of me in thinking that Halo: Reach will be Bungie's best game to date, that Black Ops will sell less than Modern Warfare 2 and that Medal of Honor isn't doing enough—at this point—to differentiate itself from the other modern day military shooters on the market.


And if I look really sleepy at any point during this episode, it's because I was.


Medal of Honor™

As promised, the Medal of Honor video, directed by Linkin Park's Joe Hahn, featuring both live-action and gameplay sequences set to the band's new song "The Catalyst," went up today. Someone certainly grew an epic beard for this trailer.


I'm told that's EA producer Greg Goodrich as Rabbit, who's been working on that badass beard since at least E3. Warning to those with empty stomachs, this thing goes into serious shakycam at the end.


Medal of Honor will be on store shelves on October 12. Linkin Park's new album, A Thousand Suns will be in stores on September 14.


I'm probably least qualified to talk about military shooters or Linkin Park, so don't take my lack of comment as any judgment. Knowing you guys, you probably have zillions of opinions. Fire away.


[Thanks Excaliburps for the heads-up]


Medal of Honor™

There's A Battlefield 3 Beta Invite In Your Medal Of Honor Limited Edition EA sweetens the deal for players picking up the limited edition of the modern-day Medal of Honor reboot on October 12, with a beta invite for DICE's highly anticipated Battlefield 3 in every package.


We've heard nary a peep regarding Battlefield 3 since EA COO John Pleasants mentioned it back in June of 2009. All we've known since then is that the game is in development.


Now we know a sure-fire way to get into the beta.


Along with some extra weapons and a remastered version of Medal of Honor: Frontline (exclusive to the PlayStation 3 version), picking up the $59.99 limited edition of Medal of Honor ensures players a spot in the Battlefield 3 beta test, which should happen within twelve months of Medal of Honor's release, according to the EA beta website.


Medal of Honor goes on sale on October 12 for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and PC. I get the feeling sales numbers will be much higher now that this news has hit.


Medal of Honor™

Ice-T Reviews Medal Of Honor's BetaRapper and TV cop Ice-T is a man of strong opinions. He is also a man who loves him some video games. So what does he think of Medal of Honor's beta?


It's hard to tell whether that's Modern Warfare fanboyism shining through or not. I'm actually enjoying the beta, especially the objective map. Or, at least, I started enjoying it once I got the half-decent weapons. Lock those out of the final game for that long and you'll get a lot of people putting their controllers down early, EA.


Also, what a life the man leads, where his most pressing concern is choosing which demo to play, then Twittering about it!


[FINALLEVEL @ Twitter]


Ice-T Reviews Medal Of Honor's Beta


Medal of Honor™

Linkin Park Is Medal Of Honor's Eminem EA combats Activision's inclusion of a soulful song from Eminem's new album in Call of Duty: Black Ops with the inclusion of a soulful song from Linkin Park's new album in Medal of Honor.


Is there some unwritten rule that big-name first-person shooter releases must contain a new song from musical artists I stopped caring about long ago? If so, might I suggest Nickelback for Ubisoft's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier?


As Activision did with Eminem, EA is doing with the modern Medal of Honor, tapping Linkin Park to provide a tune from their upcoming album for the game. The album is A Thousand Suns, and the song is "The Catalyst." You can listen to a little of it in the video below.

See? It's very soulful and deep, even though it sounds like a lot of the other deep and soulful songs released over the past decade.


Not only is the song appearing in the game, it'll also be featured in a full-length music video directed by Linkin Park's Joe Hahn. The video will appear on the Medal of Honor website on August 1, one day before it hits the radio and iTunes.


Medal of Honor will be on store shelves on October 12. Linkin Park's A Thousand Suns will be in stores on September 14.


It's times like this I like to imagine an Ubisoft PR rep somewhere reading this and gasping, "He knows!"


Medal of Honor™

Get Your Medal of Honor Beta Keys HereDidn't buy Bad Company 2? Still want in on the Medal of Honor beta? No worries, below you'll find two dozen beta keys first-come, first-served. The beta is now available for Xbox 360, PS3, and PC gamers. Enjoy!


GXWH-96WF-EH7Z-T39E
AD8D-3BUA-FKKG-HSWF
5LDZ-JVSR-4MFP-K865
6HKY-3GZ9-NCM4-7FGS
E4DM-4PSG-JGK7-NTFX
CYP3-9BSQ-D4M8-GS6B
7F5W-WY2U-LST8-JLNZ
DS7M-F54C-K3GB-WEXK
ANC2-L87L-KS9T-6ZQT
3CA4-U4HS-54R2-F69F
GVUJ-9M27-TRBE-SHEF
CE4Q-R9DN-8FVE-34W3
EPXG-76GQ-YMMY-RDGE
2EEG-U6FG-T9UY-BNZF
BG7E-DNT6-JLV9-NQP7
3GRN-NK88-A44V-CBWV
FRGZ-MZS7-3W23-PAGB
6B66-U8MC-64JK-QPYH
5BNC-SUWV-3CC6-5VYB
HYDV-DQUK-YGXQ-24QV
B2KZ-ACQT-CUYX-Z2YV
CFDN-FRPE-XGNC-KGWY
4NP3-CD82-R8MV-BSNX
6FWT-J4ZL-GD27-SLPC
2GLN-UKVG-T9P6-DQQ9


To activate go to www.medalofhonor.com/beta. Beta keys are valid for use for the Xbox 360, PS3 and PC versions.


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