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Now, because we’re all experts in the gamer psyche, it’s a safe bet that a contingent of you are rolling your eyes and tut-tutting vigorously and shaking your fists abjectly at the screen, vainly attempting to will this thing out of existence: how dare games get made of an Internet meme? Is this what the world’s come to?

But remember that in the 90s, there was a best-selling videogame about a soda mascot (opens in new tab) and the SNES nearly had a game about the President’s cat (opens in new tab); and that the only reason Capcom scrapped its game about an incredibly racist team of cartoon raisins (opens in new tab) was that in those days, the time it took to develop and release a game meant the buzz had died before you could get the box-art mocked up. We live in a brave new age, when the weight of an idea is enough to turn it from %26ldquo;bizarre video beloved by fwd-happy aunts%26rdquo; to %26ldquo;Internet-hipster music-video%26rdquo; to %26ldquo;99 cent iPhone game%26rdquo; in no time at all. We’re but pre-evolved passengers clinging to the back of avaricious, relentlessly-galloping progress %26ndash; and while we can only see what’s behind us, all we can do now is hold on and enjoy the ride.
Today, friends, we are all baby monkey riding on a pig.
Aug 9, 2011
The post Baby Monkey (Going Backwards on a Pig) offers truth in advertising appeared first on Game News.
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