gdc-paris

Latest

  • Amidst speculation, Blizzard VP implies completely new game

    by 
    Samuel Axon
    Samuel Axon
    06.25.2008

    Blizzard fans all over the internet have worked themselves up into a frenzy over a vague splash screen at the company's website -- a melting wall of ice adorned with rune or sigil-like markings. Everyone's speculating. Is it Diablo 3? Maybe it's just a promo for Wrath of the Lich King. After all, the ice motif seems to fit, right?Maybe not. During a Q&A session at GDC Paris 08, Blizzard VP Rob Pardo was asked to comment on "the new game." He replied saying, "So you want me to announce the game before the announcement?" That was a classic press conference or Q&A blunder; you're not supposed to accept the premise of an unwanted or hostile question!

  • Rob Pardo talks about free WoW, Starcraft, Activision

    by 
    Natalie Mootz
    Natalie Mootz
    06.24.2008

    Rob Pardo, SVP of game design at Blizzard, gave the keynote speech at the Game Developer's Conference held in Paris this week. Here are some WoW-related tidbits from his talk and the Q&A session held afterward.About WoW WoW was first conceived as free to play, being supported by advertising. However, the non-subscription business model couldn't support Blizzard's goals for the game. Pardo suggested that Blizzard approached the MMO genre "very naively, or else we might not have done it." He once hired a WoW player who sent him a 16-page diatribe about the game because, even though the guy was wrong, "he was passionate" about improving the game. About Starcraft 2 Blizzard has no problem putting intellectual properties on hold for a while, hence the wait for a Starcraft game. Pardo says that they wanted to make a real-time strategy game but were "tired of green-skinned orcs" so they moved away from Warcraft to Starcraft. Starcraft 2 is at a playable stage in its development and he's having a lot of fun with it. Read more about Rob Pardo's keynote speech.

  • EA Sports to bundle accessories over the next year

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    06.24.2008

    Apparently, EA sees the Wii's success with bundled peripherals as a sign of its future prosperity. Following in the footsteps of Mario Kart Wii and Wii Fit, EA Sports have made their intentions to bundle peripherals in their future sports titles known to one and all at GDC Paris.During his lecture, EA's David McCarthy commented that it isn't just about tossing some hunk of plastic into the package and jacking up the price (funny, that's what we thought they had in mind). "You have to be careful with it," he said, adding "because Rock Band, that's a great peripheral, but it's a big expensive box." As nice as it would be for EA Sports to jack up the price, McCarthy commented that the company doesn't want this approach to "raise that barrier of entry and accessibility" the titles currently enjoy.