Is it necessary for the games in the movie to exist?

Suzanne 2022-05-20 10:12:30

If the film is not well-made, the plot is actually only at the level of a B-level film, a game geek, it is easy to judge whether the game in the film is necessary.
It is very possible that the killing game that the protagonist participates in will be popular. This kind of reality show has been enduring in the United States, not to mention that this is a bloody show with no performance component of real swords and guns. But the most morally limited country in the world is the United States. It is impossible for various defenders to tolerate the existence of such a program, no matter how many years later. Hollywood screenwriters are very pitiful. They always demonize the future of the United States. In fact, this is a country most unlikely to collapse. This makes the compilation of the story on an untrustworthy basis. So such a game is impossible to survive in the United States.
Excluding the national conditions of the United States, analyze this game from the perspective of geeks. Real-life virtual shooting is an upgraded version of CS. If shooting games are still popular decades later, it will not be HALFLIFE's 20.0 engine. Since nanotechnology can control human behavior, it is certainly easy to reversely output sensory stimuli to the brain. Such a 360-degree screen is meaningless in those years. The wireless router at home can directly connect to the brain. The interaction with the computer does not even need to open the eyes. It is completely unnecessary to control a real half-aged milf for erotic experience. The computer The calculated experience effect, the character response 100% can meet the player's needs. The same goes for controlling a real person to have a bloody shooting experience, not to mention the absence of somatosensory interaction.

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Extended Reading

Gamer quotes

  • Ken Castle: I hope one day to have the opportunity to breach your firewall, Miss Parker Smith.

    [kisses her hand]

  • [last lines]

    Kable: Hey. Shut it off.

    Geek Leader: Pardon?

    Kable: The Nanex. It means nothing to you, it's just a mouse click. Set us free.

    [the Geek Leader nods at another technician, who enters the command on his tablet]

    Geek Leader: Well played, Kable.