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Angel_Mapper
27th Jul 2005, 11:55 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/games_blind_gamer;_ylt=AjlqGsM71MQpjQsWXtPYvpas0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3ODdxdHBhBHNlYwM5NjQ-
LINCOLN, Neb. - Brice Mellen is a whiz at video games such as "Mortal Kombat." In that regard, the 17-year-old isn't much different from so many others his age. Except for one thing: He's blind.

And as he easily dispatched foes who took him on recently at a Lincoln gaming center, the affable and smiling Mellen remained humble.

"I can't say that I'm a superpro," he said, working the controller like an extension of his body. "I can be beat."

Those bold enough to challenge him weren't so lucky. One by one, while playing "Soul Caliber 2," their video characters were decapitated, eviscerated and gutted without mercy by Mellen's on-screen alter ego.

"I'm getting bored," Mellen said in jest as he won game after game.

Blind since birth when his optic nerve didn't connect because of Leber's disease, Mellen honed his video game skills over the years through patient and not-so-patient playing, memorizing key joystick operations and moves in certain games, asking lots of questions and paying particular attention to audio cues. He worked his way up from games such as "Space Invaders" and "Asteroid," onto the modern combat games.

"I guess I don't know how I do it, really," Mellen said, as he continued playing while facing away from the screen. "It's beyond me."

Mellen knows this much: He started playing at home when he was about 7.

"He enjoyed trying to play, but he wasn't very good at first," said his father, Larry Mellen. "But he just kept on trying. ... He's broken a lot of controllers."

When the question of broken controllers comes up, Mellen flashes a smile and just shrugs.

"I used to have quite a temper," he said. "Me and controllers didn't get along very well."

Now they get along just fine.

While playing "Soul Caliber 2," Mellen worked his way through the introductory screens with ease, knowing exactly what to click to start the game he wanted.

He rarely asked for help. Once the game started he didn't need any help.

"How do I move?" an exasperated opponent, Ryan O'Banion, asked during a battle in which his character is frozen in place.

"You can't," Mellen answered before finishing him off.

"That's what happens. It's why I don't play him," O'Banion said after his blood-spattered character's corpse vanishes from the screen.

How Mellen became so good is a mystery to his father.

"He just sat there and he tried and tried until he got it right," Larry Mellen said. "He didn't ever complain to me or anyone about how hard it was."

Mellen hangs out any chance he gets at the DogTags Gaming Center in Lincoln, which opened last month. Every now and then someone will come in and think he can easily beat the blind kid.

That attitude doesn't faze Mellen.

"I'll challenge them, maybe. If I feel like a challenge," he said, displaying an infectious confidence. "I freak people out by playing facing backwards."

There's nothing he likes better than playing video games, Mellen said.

He will be a senior in high school next year. After graduation, he plans to take a year off because he wants a break from school.

When he does go to college, Mellen wants to study — what else? — video-game design.Wow. :eek:

The Dopefish
27th Jul 2005, 11:59 PM
Those bold enough to challenge him weren't so lucky. One by one, while playing "Soul Caliber 2," their video characters were decapitated, eviscerated and gutted without mercy by Mellen's on-screen alter ego.

...

"That's what happens. It's why I don't play him," O'Banion said after his blood-spattered character's corpse vanishes from the screen.


That article loses all credibility for two reasons:


It's "Soul Calibur", not "Soul Caliber"
There is no gore in Soul Calibur 2Plus, getting into action in most games isn't rocket science...start start start start.

Azura
28th Jul 2005, 12:10 AM
Video games do have some therapeutic applications. One is to stimulate depressed people and another is to bring people out of a self-created isolated state.

SomewhatSuicidal
28th Jul 2005, 12:21 AM
I was under the impression that too much gaming can create an isolated state.

Cap'n Beeb
28th Jul 2005, 12:23 AM
The article went from Mortal Kombat, a gorey game, to Soul Calibur 2, a game with no gore... someone isn't doing their homework, not paying attention, or don't know what the fsck.

That's cool the kid can do that though.

The Dopefish
28th Jul 2005, 12:30 AM
The article went from Mortal Kombat, a gorey game, to Soul Calibur 2, a game with no gore... someone isn't doing their homework, not paying attention, or don't know what the fsck.

That's cool the kid can do that though.

I'm trying to figure out if the guy made it up. If the kid is l33t, he probably wouldn't almost get beat by the AI:

http://us.news3.yimg.com/us.i2.yimg.com/p/ap/20050727/capt.nebw20107271758.games_blind_gamer_nebw201.jpg?x=327&y=345&sig=aAOZrezAJqekLz3V5cWMZQ-- (http://us.news3.yimg.com/us.i2.yimg.com/p/ap/20050727/capt.nebw20107271758.games_blind_gamer_nebw201.jpg?x=327&y=345&sig=aAOZrezAJqekLz3V5cWMZQ)

togmkn
28th Jul 2005, 01:19 AM
Plus, getting into action in most games isn't rocket science...start start start start.
Pfft...yeah. When you put it that way, he's really just a total n00b.:lol: :D ;)

captainrad
28th Jul 2005, 01:27 AM
well its not a "3d" atmospher.. theres simply left and right (right?).. so somehow he knows which side he is on and just faces that side...

i mean come on.. we've all played button mashing games before.. peice of cake.

i guess if it makes the guy feel good/cool then hey pretty neat.

edit: i probably dont know what im talking about.. but reading more, this guys got a dream to big i would say.. how do you study video game design when your blind? unless someone invents a brail constant changing monitor.. and loads of brail code.. and books with pictures of things in brail somehow.. possible brail mobies and food, and muhc.
sleepton.

Azura
28th Jul 2005, 02:58 AM
I was under the impression that too much gaming can create an isolated state.

Retracted was the word I was looking for. Yes, video games can cause an individual to isolate themselves.

P.S: It makes you wonder if sight is actually an obstacle to playing 2d beat 'em ups.

mokeh
28th Jul 2005, 04:14 AM
i bet he is a button basher :rolleyes:

togmkn
28th Jul 2005, 04:21 AM
Yeah, but still. A blind button masher is impressive. And, it sounded like he "strategically" wasted the other guys, so hey, there must be something there. If not strategically, wasting is wasting ;)

Jackal
28th Jul 2005, 08:10 AM
A B A B Up, Down Down R R.....hey i did that with out looking, im super cool.

K
28th Jul 2005, 10:15 AM
That article brings a word to mind "Bullsh*t"
He is blind!!! you cannot play video games if you cant see the video screen!:lol:
Yes i believe Button Masher is the right strategy for this guy, I also think the people he is playing suck worse then him:lol:
but all is ok . . the dude is trying, but most importantly he is having fun!

Zxanphorian
28th Jul 2005, 11:10 AM
Hmm he might be good with sidescrolling games, but 3d ones, nope.
Imagine him playing UT or Halo or BF or other games. He doesn't stand a chance.

tool
28th Jul 2005, 11:18 AM
There is a guy in South Korea who is blind and has won Star Craft tournaments, it is pretty impressive. Being good at Soul Calibur II is really nothing amazing, as far as being a tournament quality fighter goes the game is pretty weak because it is so unbalanced. But that is still very cool that a blind person is playing video games, regardless of whether or not he is good doesn't matter.

Shroom-FX
28th Jul 2005, 11:22 AM
wat a n00b id liek totally pwn him n stuf

Bean316
28th Jul 2005, 11:30 AM
I saw this on Fark, so I already knew how this thread was going to "Yeah, but he's a button masher, stupid blindie".

Myrmidion
28th Jul 2005, 02:05 PM
That article loses all credibility for two reasons:


It's "Soul Calibur", not "Soul Caliber"
There is no gore in Soul Calibur 2Plus, getting into action in most games isn't rocket science...start start start start.

You know, the writer could've been using words like 'eviscerated' and 'gutted' to indicate exactly how easily this guy slammed these people around - they sorta have more effect than 'beat soundly' or 'defeated'.
About the name; maybe the guy doesn't play it very much and just figured that 'Caliber' was the correct spelling. After all 'Caliber' is a dictionary word - 'Calibur' isn't. :)

FredTheFat
28th Jul 2005, 02:23 PM
There is a guy in South Korea who is blind and has won Star Craft tournaments, it is pretty impressive. Being good at Soul Calibur II is really nothing amazing, as far as being a tournament quality fighter goes the game is pretty weak because it is so unbalanced. But that is still very cool that a blind person is playing video games, regardless of whether or not he is good doesn't matter.
There is no way you could play starcraft if you were blind.

You know, the writer could've been using words like 'eviscerated' and 'gutted' to indicate exactly how easily this guy slammed these people around - they sorta have more effect than 'beat soundly' or 'defeated'.
About the name; maybe the guy doesn't play it very much and just figured that 'Caliber' was the correct spelling. After all 'Caliber' is a dictionary word - 'Calibur' isn't. :)

He also said "after his blood-spattered character's corpse vanishes from the screen."

Twisted Metal
28th Jul 2005, 02:29 PM
Imagine him playing BF... He doesn't stand a chance.

Actually I bet he could handle the planes and helo's a lot better than some people on the pubs who crash into trees or buildings shortly after takeoff. :lol:

But yeah this article is BS. Let's see him play pong.

Airmoran
28th Jul 2005, 05:31 PM
Fighting games are pretty heavy on audio cues. It's not like he needs to know where he is on the stage or where the other guy is. So yeah, hear a sword or whatever incoming? Block it. Pull off whatever button combo that does the trick. He's been blind throughout life. I'm guessing he's gotten good living with it.

That's one theory, the other is that he's not as blind as the article makes it out to be. Leber's disease, as far as google tells me, is gradual, and may not result in complete blindness. So yeah, he could just be visually impared. Hey, same thing as being "legally blind."

But yeah, there's probably tons of times where he'd go "wtf, I'm dead?" "Yeah, you walked off the edge."

And finally, about that blind starcraft thing, apparently there's a whole "guild" for blind korean starcraft players. Eh, if it works for them...

Gundato
28th Jul 2005, 10:39 PM
"How do I move?" an exasperated opponent, Ryan O'Banion, asked during a battle in which his character is frozen in place.

"You can't," Mellen answered before finishing him off.

Assuming that is not total crap, it explains what he does. Something anyone can do.

Correct me if I am wrong (I only really played Mortal Kombat and the first three Tekken games), but generally the two players start at roughly the same distance from each others. So if you act fast enough with combos and the like, you can take out an unsuspecting opponent before they even move. Just requires a bit of juggling. With just two or three sequences of moves you have a fairly good chance of taking out any opponent.

Not as glamorous as the idea of him blocking and countering everything, but a lot more likely.

L_S
28th Jul 2005, 11:29 PM
Duh, come on guys, obviously he's somehow connected to the machine world. In this place do you really think seeing has something to do with your eyes? Do you think that is air that you are breathing? The obvious conclusion? He is the One!:eek:

mokeh
29th Jul 2005, 02:25 AM
I hear he can drive a car too, he goes forward until he hears a crunching sound, reverses for 5 seconds, turns right 45 degrees and goes forward once again!

tool
29th Jul 2005, 10:20 AM
There is no way you could play starcraft if you were blind.



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