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26 translation contest: "Game on" » English to Russian

Competition in this pair is now closed, and the winning entry has been announced.

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Source text in English

Computer games were, at one time, unified. We didn’t even have the term “casual game” in 1993, let alone the idea that a first-person shooter (then an unnamed genre) could be considered a “hardcore title.” There were people who played computer games, and people who didn’t. People who got way into golf or Harpoon or hearts or text adventures — those were the “hardcore” players, in that they played their chosen field obsessively.

When Myst and the CD-ROM finally broached the mass market, this ecosystem was disrupted. Myst had, Robyn Miller makes clear, been designed to appeal to non-gamers. It sold to them. Enthusiast magazines like Computer Gaming World couldn’t set the taste for the industry anymore: there were millions buying games who didn’t read these magazines. An entirely new breed of player. In this situation, what could be more natural than concocting an us-and-them formula? In a very real way, it was already true.

The great narrative of Myst is that the “hardcore” game press and playerbase lambasted it when it launched. Disowned it. A slideshow, they called it. Abstruse, idiotic puzzles; pretty graphics and not much depth. “Critics and hardcore game players universally panned it as a slide-show that had little actual gameplay interaction”, claimed PC Gamer’s Michael Wolf in 2001.That same year, a columnist for Maximum PC recalled Myst as a “tedious code-breaking and switch-throwing mess”, and saw its then-new remake realMYST as “a pointed reminder of why the press dumped on the original so heavily when it came out.”

The winning entry has been announced in this pair.

There were 7 entries submitted in this pair during the submission phase. The winning entry was determined based on finals round voting by peers.

Competition in this pair is now closed.


Entries (7 total) Expand all entries

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Entry #32065 — Discuss 0 — Variant: Not specified
Winner
Voting points1st2nd3rd
469 x45 x20
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Entry #32501 — Discuss 0 — Variant: Not specified
Voting points1st2nd3rd
388 x42 x22 x1
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Entry #32077 — Discuss 0 — Variant: Standard-Russia
Voting points1st2nd3rd
275 x43 x21 x1
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Entry #32174 — Discuss 0 — Variant: Standard-Russia
Anna Mironova
Anna Mironova
Federação Russa
Voting points1st2nd3rd
203 x41 x26 x1
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Entry #32393 — Discuss 0 — Variant: Not specified
Anna Lowry
Anna Lowry
Estados Unidos
Voting points1st2nd3rd
151 x43 x25 x1
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Entry #32365 — Discuss 0 — Variant: Not specified
Anton S
Anton S
Belarus (Bielo-Rússia)
Voting points1st2nd3rd
91 x42 x21 x1
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Entry #32150 — Discuss 0 — Variant: Standard-Russia
Voting points1st2nd3rd
71 x41 x21 x1
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