07 November 2009 ~ 1 Comment

Can Online Gaming Do More Than Simply Pass Time?

So have you ever played games while at work or while attending a class?

Games are everywhere these days.  People of all ages are flocking to games on their iPhones, cell phones, iPods, PSP’s, and of course laptops.

Obviously many argue that they’re perfectly capable of doing more than one thing at once, and with games like solitaire where there are no time limits involved this is pretty understandable.

solitaire3

On the other hand, lawmakers were recently singled out in photos showing their apparent lack of interest in their congressional duties at a time where budgets where weeks late, bills were being signed without being read, and of course during a time of war when our leaders appear to be unable to make any decision as to how to fight it.

Nevertheless, gaming is becoming more and more a part of our daily lives.  There are obviously times when it is certainly inappropriate to be playing online games.  During weddings, funerals, church services, and probably while passing law.

On the other hand, there are plenty of times when you simply need a distraction from the daily grind.  In the U.S., federal labor law dictates that you are allowed at least one fifteen minute break for every 4 hour work period.  If that involves a little gaming to find that escape, then what’s the problem?  Plus you often have a whole hour at lunch right?  Chances are if you have a few minutes to unwind, you’ll do a better job of focusing once you get back to work.

FACT:  Gaming is cheaper and better for you than taking a smoke break.

One of my favorite games is Evony.  This is an online expansion and conquest game that involves building up a small village and eventually evolving it into not only a large castle, but you can have an entire countryside of castles.   I quit Evony, see note below!

But there is more to Evony than just building castles and maintaining an army.  In its own way, Evony teaches us a few things that we should be reminded of in business, in marketing, and in life.

  1. Consistently making small efforts towards building your dreams.
    Whether your dream is to build your business, a second income, a new home, or in this case a small castle, Evony teaches us that it’s better to make hundreds of small motions, than to simply put off everything because you don’t have time to make big motions.

    With Evony, you can log on, make a few changes, and then get back to what you were doing.  You don’t have to sit there and babysit it for hours on end.  With proper planning you can log in, build up your castle, and then come back later to enjoy the benefits and plan for the next stage in your development.

  2. Proper Planning and Evolutionary Growth
    As with any venture, there are more little things to do at the very beginning.  With Evony, the initial task are set in minutes, rather than hours.  Plus Evony’s beginner kits allow you to skip past the waiting.  The proper use of these tools can make the game especially enjoyable when you have time to play a bit longer than usual. As your castle grows and your character gains prestige, you will have more and more responsibilities.  You will find that you need to decide when and where to expand, and how to allocate those resources.

  3. Failure Happens
    You also have to be prepared for failure and even be able to withstand and recover from disasters.  Look, anybody that tells you that they built their business, marketed a business, or even created their dream home without some unexpected challenges and failures is simply a liar.  Evony isn’t a fantasy game where you can just go chat with friends every day.  In order to keep from getting squashed, you’re going to have to build up a defense and join an alliance.

  4. Reward Happens!
    With risk comes reward right?  Well it’s true too with Evony.  Instead of a long boring tutorial on how to play the game, Evony intelligently created a reward system to inspire correct behavior.  Good boy… roll over!  Okay so what it works!   It’s still better than tutorials.   Evony is brilliant in their rewards system.  You get rewarded for accomplishing things, and those rewards grow depending on how difficult the accomplishment is.  As in any business, there is also just plain dumb luck involved.  Evony has a daily reward that you get just for playing, but that reward is entirely random.  But isn’t that like real life?   If you had not stayed late to help a client, you wouldn’t have received the phone call from another client that’s ready to make a big order.   These things happen and you never know what’s around the corner.

barkonI could go on and on about Evony.  If you like strategy games, then you’ll like this one.  The only thing I can think of that would make this better would be interactive battle scenes.  Evony has tons of detail when it comes to building the logistics for a successful city, but when it comes down to warfare and battlefield strategies, it is lacking a bit.  But hey no game is perfect.

This one is certainly fun and unless you want to buy upgrades, it’s absolutely free.  Plus, you can log in from any web-browser, set your actions, and get back to work in under a minute!

So hop onto Evony at evony.com and look for Lord Barkon on Server 084!

Actually I quit playing Evony.   The constant push to get me to pay them money, and lots of it… just caused me to get sick of the game.  At one point, I couldn’t advance until I paid something, so I quit!  I still like the concept, but not with a game where you compete with people who can simply plug money in to defeat you.

- Tony Darrick Baker

One Response to “Can Online Gaming Do More Than Simply Pass Time?”

  1. Lee 11 November 2009 at 10:11 am Permalink

    I am a student studying computer games design at uni and decided to investigate Evony.com.
    Just to see what some of these games are like etc. etc.
    The game is actually kind of cool (found myself addicted and even spent a little money on it).
    But I started to notice HUGE bandwidth use by the site as I played.
    I am not the only one either, there are comments on the evony forums about this.
    This is odd because all of the client info, the animations etc. are all downloaded in one big download at the start.
    There is no streaming media so I began to wonder what was going on.

    To cut a long story short I decided to break the law and reverse engineer Evony’s client.
    Not to cheat. Not to rip them off or even to use even a scrap of the code.
    But just to poke about a bit and find out what was going on, maybe even offer them some ways to improve things.

    Aside from the fact that the whole thing is very poorly constructed (it is really very beginner coder level stuff. Reminds me of a lot of
    what the first year students produce for assignments) it contained some very interesting information.

    Included with the client are 2 peices of tracking software that monitor your web use and which applications you have open while the client is running.
    These do not install independently on the machine though due to the limitations of flash and do not actually damage anything.
    But they harvest massive volumes of information. My firewall was blocking a lot of outgoing transmissions and it turns out that these
    were the data trying to be sent out. So they know nothing about me. lol.
    However there is a LOT of data coming IN over the ports the client uses. In otherwords it is downloading something into my cache for use later.
    I have bandiwdth restriction which slows these types of tricks down and I completely clear my cache every couple of hours if I am heavily using the net.

    I also noticed that all the varanbles etc. are named Civony still and that there are multiple references to UMGE.
    Even a couple of folders are simply called UMGE, one of these folders contains one of the spyware programs.
    So I can only guess at where the data would end up if I didnt have a good firewall.

    There are also commented out sections in the code which contain references to UMGE and Lam himself, though low on details.

    Thank you for reading this.

    Lee


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