[img width=500 height=375]http://diamondtrustgame.com/boxes.png[/img]
There is a good chance you may not know of 'conflict diamonds,' and the politics surrounding them. There may be a slightly better chance you know of Jason Rohrer. Both are things best to have awareness of, which brings us to
Diamond Trust of London.Perhaps the most famous aspect of this game is not its setting or even its notable creator;
Diamond Trust is the first DS game launched from Kickstarter.
(
http://www.kickstarter.co...6/diamond-trust-of-london)
It took several years, and according to Rohrer, many a fortunate situation, but the game is now available, though only through the website:
http://diamondtrustgame.com/buy.phpIt comes with a typical DS case and manual, and everything included is very professional and pretty much the same as buying any new DS game from retail. As for the creator:
If Jason Rohrer's name just sounds to you like Scooby Doo trying to warn you of Friday the 13th, I highly recommend looking the man up. For a coder/programmer/engineer/musician, the guy practices 'simple living' with a family of four coming under 15k a year, has a number of interesting political and sociological theories (as his lifestyle suggests) and his games are mostly free experiments. I can't say I'd agree with the guy on everything, though I respect him for standing in his beliefs (see if you can catch his somewhat veiled criticism of circumcision from his personal website, or his interesting defenses of natural habitats.)
Most relevant here, Jason Rohrer is an award winning game designer, and his takes on game design are often cited when referencing video games as a medium to be used beyond typical base entertainment value. Works like
Passage and
Sleep is Death are designed to push our buttons as much as we push buttons on a controller.
Much more 'typical' a game is
Diamond Trust. Though the setting is political and contemporary, it never moves past the background to become preachy (if you have no idea what the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme is, Rohrer is not about to use a game to tell you.) The design is an almost standard board game, and the strict two-player limit (an AI opponent is available, though the game's own manual desires the player to seek out someone else to play as soon as possible) keeps the focus razor sharp. This is a game about bluffing, bribing, resource management, and second/third/fourth guessing your rival.
If you normally read board games as 'bored games,' know that
Diamond Trust is a tighter, faster paced, meaner version of the games you fell asleep to during family reunions or the backup entertainment for those college nights when the power went out and so did the LAN party. Simpler than Monopoly, darker than Catan, and far cheaper to acquire than Dark Tower, if you have another human whose wit you want to match, I can think of fewer alternates as fun.
Only one copy of the game is required, (you send a download copy to another DS) and the DL copy only looses the nifty chiptune music during play. My beloved and I sat down with it the night it arrived and we didn't want to stop playing. Considering the kids were in bed already, giving us some precious alone time, and this is what we wanted to do with it, I can't think of a better way to recommend
Diamond Trust of London.
Thanks for the heads up!
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Very interesting and cool to say the least. I didn't find a good gameplay video, but there is a decent video about the gameplay on the Kickstarter page for those interested: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1443658586/diamond-trust-of-london
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Game looks amazing. Would games of this nature be considered homebrew?
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@KidA: Good point. I'm going to say no, simply because Nintendo has approved the game for release (not that it means anything anymore). He has official cartridges and boxes. The only thing different is that he is the publisher (As far as I know).
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Well I've heard of social gaming-- but gaming that makes you socially aware? Hey, why not?
Not sure I'd get this myself, though. None the less, I wish Mr. Rohrer and Co. the best.
BTW when I read the title of this blog, I started singin' it to the tune of Warren Zevon's signature tune:
AWOOOO, Diamond Trust of London... AWOOOOOOO
Hey, maybe they could use that for the TV and radio ads. Ya gotta admit, it'd be a real attention-grabber.
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Sounds very different, like the rest of his catalog of creations. Just ordered my copy.
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Someone posted about this on Nintendoage fairly early on and even back then I wanted it. Unfortunately it came around a time (and I'm still in that era) of other financial commitments so I'm gonna have to pass. It looks really cool though and I'm super happy to see kick starter used on such projects.
And since you brought it up.... circumcision is a barbaric, disgusting and immoral act. Anyone who chooses to have elective cosmetic surgery on their infant is beyond my comprehension and should question how much they really care about their child.
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@Crabmaster2000: I have to admit I feel... differently about that, but it seems more PM discussion material (which I always welcome) than a followup to this article.
As to waiting to pick up [I]Diamond Trust[/I]; there are 4,181 copies in store, so probably no rush. But you never know; I 'kick' myself for missing a chance at a special edition by not backing the original Kickstarter.
The only reason I'd tell a DS gamer to pass on this one (aside from finances, of course) would be if you don't have anyone else in mind to play against. Like competitive Solitaire, a big part of the point is lost.
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Very interesting, Slackur. Thanks for sharing. Not what I would traditionally think of as "up my alley," but it certainly looks interesting. Don't think I can swing this one with Christmas being so close, but good to know (just in case).
Well, if the circumcision question ever comes into play again we know exactly where Crab stands
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I received my copy today, but I see both a regular entry and a Limited Edition entry in the database. Can someone (one of the 2 owners) tell me what makes their copies LE, considering that they are ALL part of a limited release?
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@Techie413: If a kickstarter donor gave $50 or more, they were given a 'special edition' that was promised to include unique gifts. I don't know anyone who did so, so I'm also curious as to what it included. Supposedly that method was the only way to acquire the SE.
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All it was, was a release that was numbered. There were 1000 of them a couple people are trying to sell theres on ebay. On a side note i got my copy today but I am keeping it in the package it came it.
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