Oftentimes it feels as though my life has video game-like qualities. Mind you, it wouldnāt be a very interesting game, but Iād love to see my commute to the burrito shop or my time spent at a desk writing⦠about video games⦠rendered into a custom video game. Actually that might be a bit too meta, even for me.
The New York Times has a story up about a new service called āAmuse Meā that allows clients to purchase high-end, customized video games:
Now, a new service, Amuse Me, is turning the video game into a personalized luxury object, offering tailor-made games where people can recreate their life stories, fight with characters of their choice ā and invest in a unique, signed piece of new media art.
The pricing for these games covers three different levels of customization, charging $27 (or, ā¬20) per modified element. The story says that the most deluxe games, which are given to the client on their own custom tablet, can cost up to ā¬50,000, or around $67,000.
āAmuse Me makes personalized games in oneās image, like having your portrait made by a painter,ā said Florent Deloison, one of the serviceās art game artists, whose work has been shown at the Pompidou Center in Paris.
āIn an era of standardized mass production, true luxury is the uniqueness of an object,ā he said. āThis could go as far as conceiving a game where each level would be based on the structure of your DNA.ā
While I donāt know if Iād drop seventy grand on it, it would be pretty neat to play āMe: The Video Game.ā Better, to have one made as a gift for a friend. That way, I could passive aggressively insert the things I donāt like about that friend into the game!
Chapter IX: Fred Borrows Kirkās Xbox Controller and Doesnāt Return It.
Chapter X: Redemption.
Inspired by Your Life, a Custom-Designed Video Game [NYT]
You can contact Kirk Hamilton, the author of this post, at [emailĀ protected]. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.