Dr. Kawashima's Brain Training has been a true breath of fresh air in the SPOnG office this year and, of course, for videogaming culture in general.
No longer does our Andy sit all alone in a corner playing his two favourite games endlessly (the Megadrive's Speedball 2 and Quake III Arena on Dreamcast if you’re interested). Instead, he is far more interested in caving his own head in by doing sums!
So it’s good to hear that the title has picked up Edge Magazine’s EIEF06 'Innovation in Gaming' award, presented to Nintendo by the mag’s editor Margaret Robertson at the Jam House in Edinburgh last night, who said: “We’re delighted that Brain Training won – it’s a great ambassador for gaming and proves that the instincts for making rewarding and entertaining software that Nintendo has honed for decades can be applied in entirely unexpected ways.”
If you had told anyone at SPOnG that this would be the case a year ago, you would have been laughed out of the office. But no, it’s true. Nintendo has successfully made mathematics into fun play. Why they couldn’t have done this when we were at school, to combat our fear and loathing of ‘double maths’ is a great shame.
Brain Training pipped a number of other contenders to the post for the coveted award including Amped 3 (Xbox 360), Dragon Quest VIII: Journey of the Cursed King (PlayStation 2), Electroplankton (Nintendo DS), Fahrenheit (PC, PS2, Xbox), Guitar Hero (PS2) and Killer 7 (GameCube, PS2).
David Yarnton, MD of Nintendo UK had the following to say: “Winning this award recognises the innovation and creativity behind Brain Training. It’s wide appeal to both young and old, gamers and non-gamers alike demonstrates our success in moving the boundaries of traditional gaming.”
There were also some awards dished out to mobile phone games, which we suppose we should also mention, with the EIEF 2006 Edge Mobile People's Choice Award going to Dirty Sanchez Party Games, beating mobile rivals Doom RPG, Lumines Mobile, and Digital Chocolate's Tower Blocks.
More from the cold, wet streets of Edinburgh as we get it.