Gamer Goes Wild at Arcade [VIDEO]
This Thai teenager makes playing a shooting game at the arcade into a full-body experience full of strange gyrations.
This Thai teenager makes playing a shooting game at the arcade into a full-body experience full of strange gyrations.
Video Game Cinema makes trailers for live-action movies based on famous video games. In their latest effort, they take on Donkey Kong, re-imagining him into 'Mr. Kong,' a disgruntaled office worker who goes ape and starts throwing barrels off the top of his building. Check it out below:
University of North Carolina goalies Lassi Hurskainen and Dan Jackson use their feet to play a real life version of the absurdly addictive video game, 'Angry Birds.'
Terry Garrett doesn't let the fact that he's blind prevent him from enjoying video games. In fact, he is able to complete multiple levels of 'The Legend of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time,' just by paying attention to the bleeps and bloops in the game's sound effects.
Check out Terry documenting his amazing technique, which involves a series of speakers, in the video below.
The Super Mario Bros. have made hundreds of appearances in different video games since the characters were introduced in 1985, but this one is probably the most unique.
It's an electronic board game version of the Nintendo classic, the player maneuvers Mario analog-style, using a conveyor belt device built inside of a cardboard box.
Take the greatest fighting video game of the '90s and combine it with the greatest family sitcom of the '90s and you've got 'Full House Mortal Kombat.'
Using only Google Earth, simple special effects and some kitschy homemade costumes, directors Sergej Hein and David Moya were able to turn a German city into a giant game of Pac-Man.
While 'Saved By The Bell' ran during the same time 8-bit video games like 'The Legend of Zelda' were popular, the early '90s sitcom never got that type of video game treatment -- until now.
Remember going to the arcade as a kid and playing those driving simulation games? Well, what if instead just sitting there when we revved the engines and hit the gas, the things actually moved?
Development on an Angry Birds movie has officially begun, but you'll have to wait until at least 2014 to see your favorite kamikaze birds on the big screen.
Rovio, the Finnish company that created the smash hit video game, has hired former Marvel Studios chairman David Maisel as a special adviser and executive producer for the upcoming film. The hire is the latest in a series of steps geared towards expanding the franchise into feature films. Just last month, Rovio acquired Finnish animation studio Kombo to begin work on short-form animated content based on the characters from the game.