Kotaku

Microsoft: There Will Be A Halo Movie At the Future of Television East conference last week, Microsoft's Frank O'Connor sat on a panel that focused on the grail of transmedia.


Halo's franchise development director is a shortish, stocky guy who looks like a feisty boxer. And he's proud bordering on arrogant about the lauded series of games that sold so many Xboxes.  "We want to have Halo on any screen we have access to," said O'Connor. That would be the height of ubiquity indeed.


After the panel, a high level network executive came up up to O'Connor and said, "We want to do something with Halo."


O'Connor shot back, "Bring piles of money."


The executive, taken aback, responded, "For Halo, we will."


Moments later, I spoke with O'Connor in a lounge area, fashioned for the event by conference producers outside NYU's new Stern school of business auditorium.


The first thing O'Connor said was, "There will be a Halo movie."


Still? After all these years, after the end of Peter Jackson as the director and Denzel Washington as the star, you're still talking about it?


"Everyone wanted to do a Halo movie, the director, Microsoft, the highest placed people at movie companies."


So what happened? "It was the lawyers," said O'Connor. "When they went behind closed doors with the contracts, things fell apart." O'Connor said that the primary sticking point was the fact that Microsoft owns all rights to Halo, and that means licensing as well. "The problem was that the movie company couldn't make any money beyond the movie."


Hollywood is populated by a weird breed of bean counters and lawyers. They expect, said O'Connor, to make money even on a movie that bombs at the box office, not only through DVD sales, but through licensing products with both alacrity and occasional abandon. They couldn't do that with Halo, so the project grew fallow.


O'Connor is adamant when he says Microsoft would happily permit any prominent director to shine in his or her own way on a Halo film. "If Danny Boyle wants to make a Danny Boyle-style movie, that's great. Let Danny Boyle be Danny Boyle. We would not constrain a director."


But perhaps the smartest place for a Halo project would be at a network like Showtime or HBO. "We'd love to see Halo as a television series. Look what HBO did with Band of Brothers or even Rome. Something like that would work because the Halo universe is so vast." In a miniseries or a longer running series, fans would be treated to deeper, more explorative narrative that drills down deep into the Halo mythos - if the writers and directors were intelligent enough.


Then, he said it again: "There will be a Halo movie. We don't need a movie. But we'd like a movie. We'd like the moms of gamers to see the movies because they would love our characters. Maybe we'll even fund it ourselves."


It makes sense. If a group of fans can make a something as moving as what's below, imagine the possibilities for a Halo movie done right.



Reprinted with permission from New York Videogame Critics Circle.


Harold Goldberg, a long time videogame journalist, is the author of All Your Base Are Belong to Us, How 50 Years of Videogames Conquered Pop Culture. It will be released on April 5. 2010 from Crown/Three Rivers Press.


Kotaku

Gifts for Gamers of All Ages—and Degrees of CleanlinessVideo game consoles are getting a bit long in the tooth. But these gifts will make them feel like brand new toys.


Gifts for Gamers of All Ages—and Degrees of Cleanliness1. Splitfish FragFX mouse controllers for PS3, $50 to $80. Studies show that mouse + keyboard gamers fare better against console gamers, so why not bring a mouse to a virtual gunfight? Splitfish plugs into your PS3 and gives you the ability to dominate your opponents with better firepower. Sorry Xboxers, it's unlikely Microsoft will let you use this anytime soon, so make sure your giftee has a PS3. [Splitfish]


Gifts for Gamers of All Ages—and Degrees of Cleanliness2. Sony Move, $100. As I said in the Sony Move review, the games now might be Wii-esque, but the fact that the PS3 is a console for core gamers means there's going to be plenty of hardcore titles coming in the future. If your friend wants a Wii but wishes it had more killing and shooting and violence, this is it. [Amazon]


Gifts for Gamers of All Ages—and Degrees of Cleanliness3. Xbox 360 Kinect, $150. As for your Xbox 360-owning friends, you'll want to get Kinect, which is a controllerless, full-body solution to the motion gaming puzzle. Controlling your Xbox with your arms and your voice is cool, but the real hype comes from games like Dance Central, which really takes motion gaming into another realm. But make sure to get Dance Central for them too. [Amazon]


Gifts for Gamers of All Ages—and Degrees of Cleanliness4. OnLive MicroConsole, $100. They might lack a huge library of games to choose from, but the fact that everything you need is in this little box—no downloading, no going out to buy games—just streaming. Explain to your friend that this is like Netflix Watch Now, except for games. This $100 box will keep him set for a long time, and plus, if you get one you can watch him play games in real time from your own TV. [OnLive]


Gifts for Gamers of All Ages—and Degrees of Cleanliness5. Rock Band 3, $60 for the game, more for peripherals. Those Guitar Hero and Rock Band friends of yours now have no excuse to actually learn those instruments they've been virtually playing. The latest game lets you use a real guitar and a real keyboard, with all the complexities of each, to power through songs. Be warned though: The real peripherals are expensive, so you might want to let them pick up the tab for those. [Amazon]


Gifts for Gamers of All Ages—and Degrees of Cleanliness6. iPod Touch, $230 to $400. All of the iOS games and apps, but none of the AT&T monthly fees. The touch might be a slightly more expensive gift than a Nintendo DS or a Sony PSP, but they've got access to a lot more titles in return. Plus, FaceTime. [Apple]


The burning sensation that comes from holiday shopping isn't from rubbing against the unwashed masses at malls: It's trying to pick out presents for everybody on your list. Gizmodo's daily gift guides and best gadgets list are the all-natural, non-smelly cure.


Kotaku

California Is The Best Place To Buy World of Warcraft: Cataclysm FirstWorld of Warcraft: Cataclysm is the kind of game shops open at midnight to sell. No shop is planning more midnight Cataclysm madness than Fry's Electronics in Fountain Valley, California.


That store will host all of the following on the night of December 6, starting at 9PM PT as midnight and the WoW expansion tick closer: a dance contest, developer meet-ups, prizes and "an exclusive live performance by The Artist Formerly Known As Level 80 Elite Tauren Chieftain, Blizzard's in-house and in-game band," according to a press release from WoW makers Blizzard Entertainment today.


For those of us who can't get to Fry's at 10800 Kalama River Avenue in Fountain Valley, Calif, there will be other midnight events. A list of U.S. Cataclysm day zero events should be at this link, sooner or later.


World of Warcraft: Cataclysm will launch in the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Russia, Sweden, the Netherlands, Spain, the UK, and the region of Taiwan.


Check out the full list here.


Kotaku

Navigating The Video Games of Black Friday Motion gaming, mobile gaming, traditional gaming. More than any year before, shopping for that gamer in your life has become a minefield of games, deals and gadgets.


With Black Friday looming, Kotaku is here to help with a hand-dandy primer on what's new, what's hot and what's coming to the world of gaming.


Motion Gaming

What is it? While motion gaming has been around in one form or another for years, it was Nintendo's 2006 release of the Wii that popularized it. This year both the Playstation 3 and Xbox 360 got their own form of motion gaming with the release of the PS3 Move and Xbox 360 Kinect. These game console add-ons have you up and out of the couch, playing games by swinging your hands, aiming at your television or even dancing in front of a camera.


How do you play it? Now that all three major gaming platforms have motion gaming, nearly every flavor of gamer can get into the action.


The Wii uses a remote that senses movement and translates it into gameplay. The PS3 Move uses a special Move controller and camera to do much the same thing, but with higher fidelity games and a bit more accuracy. The Xbox 360 Kinect ditches the controller altogether, turning you, as Microsoft says, into the controller. A camera detects what you do, from head to toe, and uses it to let you control games.


What are the best games for it?
PS3 Move
Sports Champions offers a wide variety of get-up-and-play sports games letting you pull the string back on a bow, go two rounds as a gladiator with a sword and play disc golf.


The Shoot turns your television into a fun, retro light-gun game, letting you gun down wooden cut outs of approaching cowboys, aliens and robots.


Wii
Kirby's Epic Yarn combines a delightful, knitting-inspired aesthetic with clever game design to deliver a title that is as fun to play as it is to look at.


Red Steel 2 puts a gun and sword in your motion-controlling hands as you fight your way through a cel-shaded wasteland.


Xbox 360 Kinect
Dance Central hopes to do for dancing what Rock Band did for singing, guitar playing and drumming. This game uses the camera and software to track you as you dance your way through routines choreographed to popular music.


Kinectimals may sound like a full-body version of popular Nintendo game Nintendogs, but once you get past all of the virtual cuddling and calling there's quite a bit of meat on this game's bones.


Mobile Gaming

What is it? Traditional cell phone games have given way to much more complex, much more fun, much more successful games on the iPhone, the Android and, now, Windows Phone 7 phones.


How do you play it? While nearly every cell phone on the planet has some sort of games on it, the best seem to be found on Apple's iPhone, Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 phones and, to a lesser extent, Google's Android phones. Apple's robust library, single virtual store and introduction of a stat-tracking Gamecenter puts it at the top of the heap for mobile games, but Windows Phone 7 had a strong start with Xbox Live support and quite a few Microsoft-created titles. The Android, out for more than two years, still hasn't found the developer support the iPhone enjoys.


The iPhone allows you to gift specific games through the iTunes store or you can purchase an iTunes gift card. Windows Phone 7 uses Microsoft points which are also sold via gift cards. The Android has no gift cards or ability to gift games.


What are the best games for it?
Android: Racer Speed Forge 3D, defense game Robo Defense and puzzle title Angry Birds are all popular on the platform.


iPhone: Karaoke title Glee Karaoke, defense game Plants Vs. Zombies and puzzler Cut the Rope, all made Kotaku's gift guide.


Windows Phone 7: Action puzzler Max and the Magic Marker, puzzle game De Blob Revolution and action game Harvest all made Kotaku's gift guide.


Traditional Gaming

What is it? Not every game has to be played on a cell phone, in 3D or by moving your body around, the biggest games are still played on the computer, the PS3, the Wii and Xbox 360 with a controller grasped in your hands.


How do you play it? All of the major platforms, even the Wii, have a stable of games played with standard game controller that have you moving around a thumbstick or mouse and pressing buttons.


What are the best games for it? It's been a spectacular year for gaming of all types. Here are just a few of our favorite titles.


DS: Puzzler Picross 3D, role-playing game Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies, and action game Sonic Colors all made Kotaku's gift guide.


PC: Strategy game StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty, action title Just Cause 2 and role-playing game Mass Effect 2 are all great choices.


PS3: Action western Red Dead Redemption, mythological action title God of War III and crime-puzzler Heavy Rain are all great choices.


PSP: Fighter BlazBlue: Calamity Trigger Portable, action game God of War: Ghost of Sparta and Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker all made Kotaku's gift guide.


Wii: Shooter GoldenEye 007, Super Mario Galaxy 2 and Monster Hunter Tri all made Kotaku's gift guide.


Xbox 360: Role-playing game Mass Effect 2, action title Red Dead Redemption and shooter Halo: Reach are all great choices.


This Friday every retailer from online store Amazon, to big box retailers like KMart, Sears and Best Buy, to video game shop GameStop have plenty of online and in-store video game deals. Make sure to look over all of your options before heading out over on our giant list of Black Friday video game sales.


If you're in the market for a new console, make sure you wait for a sale this week to pick one up. Retailers are throwing in everything from free games to gift certificates when you pick up a new platform.


Good hunting, and good luck.


Well Played is a weekly news and opinion column about the big stories of the week in the gaming industry and its bigger impact on things to come. Feel free to join in the discussion.


Kotaku

It's amazing what a single, surprisingly-fitting piece of music can do for a game. Take Robot Unicorn Attack, for instance. The original was wonderful. The remakes? All that really changes is the art and that single song.


Robot Unicorn Attack's latest target is Christmas. The 99 cent iPhone game is due to hit iTunes Tuesday with a snowy background, antlers, red nose and a green knit sweater for R.U. and one bitching piece music to which you can play.


I don't think I've ever heard "Christmas Time (Don't Let the Bells End)" by the Darkness before, but now I can't stop listening to it, holding my breath for those dog-calling, falsetto high notes.



Kotaku

The theme song for Conan O'Brien's new show on TBS sounds sorta kinda like a theme song from Super Mario Bros. 3. And we know someone who works with Conan loves Mario. Right? Listen.


Even the guy making the video concedes this might be a stretch, but listen and then try to not hear it.


Conan's Super Mario theme? [Kevin McGuire on Vimeo]


Kotaku

Our video games are in color. Even our noir video games set in 1940s Los Angeles. They don't have to be, right? This is a trailer for Rockstar Games' L.A. Noire, with one change. We made it black and white.


Sure, this is a crude transfer. I took Rockstar Games and Team Bondi's official L.A. Noire trailer....



... and sapped the color.


I did this, because, well, it seemed like it might be the right thing to do. After I ran impressions of the noir thriller last week on Kotaku, people asked me if the game was in black-and-white, if it could be played in that mode. Black and white would seem to fit the milieu of fast-talking detective work in seedy, dangerous mid-20th-century Hollywood.


One Kotaku reader named t0ddd had asked:


I haven't read much about the game and only understand the very basic premise and keep the title in mind—which makes me wonder, why isn't it in black and white? That would truly be bold


I had asked the Rockstar people, too, last week, whether there would be a black and white option for their game. It came up during small talk as they played the game in front of me. Their answer was inconclusive, and it was hard to tell if the spring 2011 game lacks the option or if it's just not been decided upon yet.


We've had black-and-white games before — the bloody Sin-City-style MadWorld, for example or the color Ninja Gaiden II which included a grainy black-and-white Akira Kurosawa-style filter, the spooky and superb downloadable game Limbo — but nothing major in terms of big-budget, heavily promoted release. Nothing that seems like it could feel so right. Is it time?


Kotaku

iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the NewPlenty of hot new titles swamped the charts this week including id's Rage for the iPhone and iPad, LEGO Harry Potter and Need For Speed Hot Pursuit.


Here's the full list of games for both platforms:


iPhone
Position Title Price Weeks Last Week
1iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Angry Birds (Clickgamer.com) $0.99 28 2
2iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Smurfs' Village (Capcom) Free (Paid DLC) 2 1
3iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Rage HD (iD Games) $1.99 1
4iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Need for Speed Hot Puruist (EA Games) $4.99 1
5iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1 - 4 (Warner Bros. Entertainment) $4.99 1
6iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Star Wars Arcade: Falcon Gunner (THQ) $4.99 1
7iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Cut the Rope (Chillingo) $0.99 7 5
8iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Tap Zoo (Street View) Free (with paid DLC) 3 3
9iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Haypi kingdom (Lae Lee) Free (with paid DLC) 1
10iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Restaurant Story (TeamLava) Free (with paid DLC) 4 3
iPad
Position Title Price Weeks Last Week
1iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Smurfs' Village (Capcom) Free (Paid DLC) 1
2iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Angry Birds HD (Chillingo Ltd.) $4.99 25 1
3iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Rage HD (id Software) $1.99 1
4iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Trucks and Skulls HD (Appy Entertainment) $1.99 1
5iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Scrabble for iPad (EA) $9.99 29 2
6iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Plants Vs. Zombies HD (PopCap Games) $9.99 4 9
7iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Restaurant Story (TeamLava) Free (With Paid DLC) 1
8iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New We Rule Quests for iPad (ngmoco) Free (With Paid DLC) 1
9iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Cut the Rope HD (Chillingo Ltd.) $1.99 7 8
10iTunes Chart Toppers: Out with the Old, In With the New Fruit Ninja HD (Halfbrick) $4.99 1

Which do you think should be the top game?


Check out all of our iPhone game reviews.


Kotaku

Talk Amongst YourselvesWe recommend that you talk about video games right here, in the comments section.


And, hey, go submit an image to #TAYpics and it might be featured in a future installment. Thanks to p4w4rr10r for today's image.


Kotaku

Nothing Says Weekend Like Robo Sushi To: Crecente
From: Bashcraft


Ahoy! Saturday was spent covering the Kinect launch in Japan. There weren't that many lines, but I do expect Microsoft to see a bump in Xbox 360 sales in Japan. How big?


It's hard to say. Japanese game retail blogs (here, here, here and here) are reporting sluggish interest. Even though in-store promotions were lacking and there was a lack in general fanfare, there could be a large number of pre-orders. People also might be picking up Kinect throughout the week... Japan has a big gaming population... Ultimately, none of that matters. The only thing that does is the sales chart, so we'll have to wait and see!


On Sunday, I went and had sushi with my family and my in-laws. I had raw beef (not pictured)! Mmmmm, raw beef.


What you missed last night
Make Your Own Cheapo Version Of The Nintendo 3DS
This Guy Can Finish Myst Faster Than I Can Make A Cup Of Tea
NSFW: Snake's Behaviour In The Field Has Been Erratic (At Best)
You Too Can Play Video Games In A Virtual Aircraft Sitting In Your Driveway
Green, Orange DSi Consoles To Go On Sale This Week


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