GPS News  
Company: 'Spore' computer game's alien population exploding

by Staff Writers
Los Angeles, California (AFP) July 15, 2008
The "Spore" alien population is exploding, boding well for the September launch of the latest brainchild of computer game legend Will Wright.

Electronic Arts-owned Maxis Studio released "creature creator" software last month in the hope that aspiring "Spore" players would bring a population of aliens to life in time for the game's premier.

The response astounded even Wright, maker of the world's top-selling computer game "The Sims."

"I was really hoping we'd get 100,000 creatures by September and a million by the end of the year," Wright said Monday while demonstrating "Spore" on the eve of the Electronic Entertainment Expo video game trade show in Los Angeles.

"We hit 100K in 22 hours and a million by the end of the first week. The numbers are just blowing us away."

A week ago, the number of creatures in the "Spore" database exceeded the number of known species on Earth.

"It took them 18 days to reach the number of creatures on Earth and, by some accounts, it took God six days," Wright joked during a presentation onstage at the vintage Orpheum Theater.

"Spore" lets people dictate the genetic development of animated characters in a mock universe.

"You are given this God-like power," Wright told AFP in a recent interview at his Maxis office in Emeryville, California.

"You can create ecosystems, biospheres ... We try to make it real science."

Players start as microscopic life forms competing for survival in primordial ooze and work their way onto land, where they evolve into creatures that build civilizations and rocket into space.

Creatures can be made to have scales, fins, wings, claws, extra appendages, additional eyes, or body parts in unexpected places.

The online game's programming gives characters artificial intelligence and figures out how they should walk, laugh, dance, fight or do other things based on what they look like.

Creatures pass on virtual genes to their progeny and build civilizations with cities, governments and economies.

In a computer game first, "Spore" worlds will be inhabited by aliens made by players instead of professional video game programmers.

Related Links
Cyberwar - Internet Security News - Systems and Policy Issues



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Internet flaw could let hackers take over the Web
San Francisco (AFP) July 8, 2008
Computer industry heavyweights are hustling to fix a flaw in the foundation of the Internet that would let hackers control traffic on the World Wide Web.







  • Raytheon Leads Team To Evaluate Impact Of New Classes Of Aircraft For NASA
  • Bombardier launches 'green' aircraft programme
  • Boeing Projects Global Shift To New, More Efficient Airplanes
  • EU lawmakers force CO2 caps on airlines

  • Off-peak electricity could power hybrids
  • Lasers, Software And The Devil's Slide
  • Future Of Transit Taking Shape At The Big Blue Bus
  • Fuel For Thought On Transport Sector Challenges

  • DRS Completes Testing Of PMM System
  • Boeing To Demo Net-Centric Upgrade On AWACS Aircraft
  • Satellite's Instrumentation Providing Scintillation Forecast Data
  • USAF E-8C Joint STARS Airframes Operationally Viable Through 2070

  • US missile defense test delayed until December
  • Russian opposition to missile defense unjustified: US general
  • What Should Russia Do To Counter US Missile Defense In Europe
  • Russia to 'neutralise' US missile defence threat: report

  • River Damming Leads To Dramatic Decline In Native Fish Numbers
  • China trade deficit in food up 14-fold: report
  • China to urgently boost GM crop development
  • Indian state facing famine after rat plague: report

  • China quake sends 1.4 million back into poverty: report
  • Asia sets stage for disaster relief exercise with key powers
  • Exercise For Rapid Disaster Relief Using Space-Based Technologies
  • Disaster deaths worse so far in 2008 than tsunami year: Munich Re

  • Eutelsat W5 Satellite Performance Stabilised
  • Integral To Provide Carrier Monitoring And Interference Detection Capability To Telenor
  • Japanese team developing palm-held 3D display
  • Thales Alenia Space To Deliver Very-High-Resolution Optical Imaging Instrument To Astrium

  • Eight Teams Taking Up ESA's Lunar Robotics Challenge
  • Three Engineers, Hundreds of Robots, One Warehouse
  • Tartalo The Robot Is Knocking On Your Door
  • Sega, Hasbro unveil new dancing robot

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement