Video game simulates Kennedy assassination
Developers say program designed to undermine conspiracy theories
http://www.anonymousproxy.co.za/nph-proxy.cgi/010110A/http/msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/041121/041121_jfkreloaded_hmed_2p.hmedium.jpg Jfkreloaded.com
A screen shot from the video game “JFK Reloaded.”
](http://www.anonymousproxy.co.za/nph-proxy.cgi/010110A/http/www.reuters.com/)](http://www.anonymousproxy.co.za/nph-proxy.cgi/010110A/http/www.reuters.com/) Updated: 5:35 p.m. ET Nov. 21, 2004
LOS ANGELES - A new video game to be released Monday allows players to simulate the assassination of President Kennedy.
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The release of “JFK Reloaded” is timed to coincide with the 41st anniversary of Kennedy’s murder in Dallas and was designed to demonstrate a lone gunman was able to kill the president.
“It is despicable,” said David Smith, a spokesman for Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy, the late president’s brother. He was informed of the game on Friday but declined further comment.
Kirk Ewing, managing director of the Scottish firm Traffic Games, which developed the game, said he understood some people would be horrified at the concept, but he insisted he and his team had nothing but respect for Kennedy and for history.
“We believe that the only thing we’re exploiting is new technology,” said Ewing, a former documentary filmmaker and senior executive with Scottish developer VIS, responsible for games like “State of Emergency.” He said he sent Edward Kennedy a letter before the game’s release.
Ewing said the game was designed to undermine the theory there was some shadowy plot behind the assassination. “We believe passionately there was no conspiracy,” he said.
Oswald’s perch recreated
Traffic Games said the objective was for a player to fire three shots at Kennedy’s motorcade from assassin Lee Harvey Oswald’s digitally recreated sixth-floor perch in the Texas School Book Depository.
Points are awarded or subtracted based on how accurately the shots match the official version of events as documented in by the Warren Commission, which investigated Kennedy’s assassination.
Shooting the image of Kennedy in the right spots in the right sequence adds to the score, while “errors” like shooting first lady Jacqueline Kennedy lead to deductions.
Each shot can be replayed in slow motion, and the bullets can be tracked as they travel and pass through Kennedy’s digitally recreated body. Players can choose to see blood by pressing a “blood effects” option.
Players can view the motorcade from a number of angles, including the perspective of filmmaker Abraham Zapruder and a view from the “grassy knoll” where some conspiracy theorists believe a second gunman was stationed.
The game will be available via download for $9.99.
Copyright 2004 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
Source(s)
MSNBC.com
GameDev.Net
I can’t say much on this, since I wasn’t alive back then and I don’t have much of any knowledge of the events (just that he got shot, and died, then LBJ took over ~4 hr’s later). I do find this as a good and bad thing though. Good in the aspect that the event is still being remembered, but bad because I don’t know if many people really want to remember that day.