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Dear game designers: Please rip off these brilliant game ideas from 2017
It’s been said that good artists borrow, but great artists steal. That’s true nowhere more than in game design. Here are 10 great ideas from this year’s best games, which we hope someone steals and re-purposes in 2018.
Video: Banksy x Danny Boyle “The Alternativity”
The story of how Britain’s favourite artist Banksy teamed up with Britain’s favourite film director Danny Boyle to put on a moving nativity play at The Walled Off Hotel in December 2017. This exciting arts documentary film offers an alternative take on the nativity story. The unique, hour-long film follows the production of a contemporary
The post Video: Banksy x Danny Boyle “The Alternativity” appeared first on StreetArtNews.
Pixi – Nature aware, self-sufficient, digital organism ‘breathes’ in the forest
Created by the artist collective WERC, "Pixi" is a digital organism located in a dutch forrest, inspired by the complex patterns that exist in nature and questions whether a technical natural phenomenon can imitate the complex aesthetics of nature or interact with it.
This Is What Happens When A Plus-Size Model Tries To Recreate Gigi Hadid’s Nude Photo Shoot
We first met Diana Sirokai a while back in a previous post of ours, when she had spent a little time recreating shots of Kim Kardashian in her own, plus-sized style. Now she has teamed up again with fashion photographer Karizza to recreate another iconic photoshoot, this time the nude shot of Gigi Hadid.
The 7 Stages of LARP Hype
We often discuss LARP drop, or the feelings of sadness and loneliness you might experience following an event when you’re alone for the first time in a while. But there’s also LARP hype, which happens on the early end of LARP planning. We mostly associate LARP hype with excitement and positivity, but the rush of […]
Simulacra Games Masters Art of Puzzle Box Sales
Simulacra Games is selling a crate of 1930s era memorabilia from the early days of animation for a studio that never existed. It’s not an elaborate counterfeiting scheme, but rather an elaborate alternate reality game in a box called The Wilson Wolfe Affair. Using the diary of a studio animator as a guide, players are guided […]
These are the top 40 games we’re looking forward to in 2018
Besting 2017 will be a challenge, but there are dozens of exciting 2018 games to keep on your radar in the coming year. Here are our picks for the 40 most anticipated games of 2018.
The Digital Antiquarian: A Conversation with Judith Pintar
Judith Pintar was responsible for what popular consensus holds to be the two best games ever created using AGT. She wrote 1991’s Cosmoserve herself, then organized the team of authors that created 1992’s Shades of Gray. Both works are inextricably bound up with the online life of their era. Cosmoserve is a simulation and gentle […]
What Happens When Professional Artists Recreate Kids’ Monster Doodles In Their Own Unique Style
Lots of children these days are so much into technology that they have no interest to pick up a pencil once in a while anymore. The Monster Project, which was featured on Bored Panda before, aims to change that. It is based out of Texas and brings together elementary students and more than 100 professional artists that work together “to help children recognize the power of their own imaginations and to encourage them to pursue their creative potential.
Galaxia: The 2018 Temple
Burning Man Arts is thrilled to announce that we have selected the 2018 Temple: Galaxia by Arthur Mamou-Mani!
Japan’s vending machines tell you a lot about the country’s culture
Earlier this year, I visited Japan to help Business Insider launch its one of its latest international editions, Business Insider Japan.
After spending two weeks in Tokyo, one aspect of the city continued to strike me after I returned: the overwhelming abundance of vending machines.
The proliferation of vending machines is impossible to ignore. They are on nearly every block in Tokyo — down alleyways, in front of convenience stores, in areas both residential and commercial.
At slightly over 5 million nationwide, Japan has the highest density of vending machines worldwide. There is approximately 1 vending machine per every 23 people, according to the Japan Vending Machine Manufacturers Association. Annual sales total more than $60 billion.
And they are marked by an incredible variety. The machines sell any number of types of soft drinks, coffee, tea, cigarettes, candy, soup, hot food, and even sake and beer.
The pervasiveness and variety of Japan’s vending machines isn’t an unexplored topic. If there’s one thing Americans returning from Japan appear to like to write/read about, it’s the wild and strange products sold in vending machines.
Among the first results on a Google search for "Japan vending machines": "12 Japanese vending machines you won’t believe exist," "18 things you can buy in Japanese vending machines," "25 things you’ll only find in vending machines in Japan," "9 crazy Japanese vending machines," and "The 7 weirdest Japanese vending machines."
What interested me, however, was what the vending machines say about Japan’s unique culture. An obvious answer stuck out: Japanese people, and Tokyoites in particular, work a lot and therefore value convenience. But so do New Yorkers, as well as any other number of city-dwellers, and still vending machines are not nearly as popular.
So why are they ubiquitous? Sociologists and economists have offered a few potential answers.
1. The cost of labor
Japan’s declining birthrate, aging population, and lack of immigration have contributed to make labor both scarce and costly, according to William A. McEachern, an economics professor at the University of Connecticut.
In his 2008 book on macroeconomics, McEachern points to Japan’s vending machines as a solution to this problem, by eliminating the need for sales clerks.
Robert Parry, an economics lecturer at Japan’s Kobe University, also pointed to high labor costs as a reason Japanese retailers have so enthusiastically embraced vending machines in a 1998 essay on the subject.
"With spectacular postwar economic growth, labor costs in Japan sky-rocketed … Vending machines need only a periodic visit from the operator to replenish the supplies and empty the cash," wrote Parry.
2. High population density and expensive real estate
With a population of 127 million people in a country roughly the size of California, Japan is one of the most population-dense countries in the world, particularly when you consider that about 75% of Japan is made up of mountains.
93 percent of the Japanese population lives in cities.
The population density has unsurprisingly led to high real estate prices for decades, forcing city-dwellers to live in apartments that would make New York apartments feel spacious. Though urban land prices dropped during Japan’s economic decline in the 1990s, they’ve gone back up since.
High population density and high real-estate prices has meant that Japanese people don’t have a lot of room to store consumer goods and that Japanese companies would rather stick a vending machine on a street than open up a retail store.
“Vending machines produce more revenue from each square meter of scarce land than a retail store can,” Parry concluded.
3. A lack of crime
Japan has long been known for its exceptionally low homicide rate, but that’s not the only crime statistic in which the country excels. According to a United Nations 2010 crime report, Japan ranks as having one of the lowest robbery rates in the world.
While there has been some debate over why Japan’s crime rate is so low, one thing that is readily obvious is that vandalism and property crime are rare. According to the Japan National Tourism Organization, vending machines are “seldom broken or stolen,” despite having tens of thousands yen inside and being frequently housed in dark alleyways or uncrowded streets.
Comparatively, in the US, as Parry writes, “American vending machine companies don’t even consider operating stand-alone, street-side units” due to fears of vandalism and property crime.
In Japan, street-side units are the norm. It doesn’t hurt that many vending machines have cameras installed and a direct line to police if any irregularities are reported, like a machine being pried open, according to The Japan Times.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
