A Great Game...If You're About to Reformat Your Hard Drive
The rules of the game are simple, as simple as the game's title Lose/Lose. Here's how creator Zach Gage describes the game: "Each alien in the game is created based on a random file on the players computer. If the player kills the alien, the file it is based on is deleted. If the players ship is destroyed, the application itself is deleted."
Posing as questioning our assumptions about our behavior when we "are given a weapon an [sic] awarded for using it, that doing so is right, " Gage's game also seeks to get users/viewers to think about what it means when we begin to prize our virtual possessions, our data, as much as if not more than actual physical possessions. Part meditation on virtual data, part philosophical tweaking on shooter game mentality, the game is considered plenty dangerous by many.
Posing as questioning our assumptions about our behavior when we "are given a weapon an [sic] awarded for using it, that doing so is right, " Gage's game also seeks to get users/viewers to think about what it means when we begin to prize our virtual possessions, our data, as much as if not more than actual physical possessions. Part meditation on virtual data, part philosophical tweaking on shooter game mentality, the game is considered plenty dangerous by many.
Even the creator reacts that way: "I'm surprised anyone has played it," Gage said. "I'm shocked."
While the game clearly spells out in multiple steps prior to installation and prior to playing what the game will do to your files and your hard drive, apparently there are people who are curious or dumb enough to install the game and play. Enough concern has been generated that the game has attracted the notice of Symantec, Sophos and Intego, who dub the game malware, each of them calling it a Trojan.
According to Kevin Haley, Symantec Security's director of product management, "We are concerned that somebody could take this and modify it in some way where users aren't aware of the consequences." While we admit that that is technically possible, at that point the file in question isn't Gage's, nor can we see how the security firms came about their classification of Trojan.
Now, having said all that, any takers? Who's up for a quick round? Anyone? Anyone?
















