Thursday, 8 April 2010
DOCTOR WHO DS GAME - Ace Tv Quiz
Ok guys there is a doctor who game In the making for DS and we want you to email us in what you think.
the name of it should be:
the plot:
the aliens:
and what doctor and companion:
Email us your answers and name to:
acetv@live.ie
Doctor Who Game Screenshots
Steven Moffat, head writer and executive producer of the new series which began on BBC1 last weekend, said: "Children don't just watch Doctor Who - they join in. They make up games, invent their monsters, create their own stories. Now, there's something else - now they can be The Doctor in brand new episodes."
Doctor Who game: Downloadable 'interactive episodes' materialising this summer
The new Doctor, fresh from saving the world with nothing more than a laptop, a camera phone and a ginger kissogram, will be appearing on your laptop in a new series of downloadable games. The BBC has pulled out the big guns for Doctor Who: The Adventure Games, with full voice-overs from the Doctor and his lovely companion Amy Pond.
The games are billed as 'interactive episodes', written by Who co-writers Phil Ford and James Moran. Each two hours long, they're produced by games developer Sumo Digital, with guidance from point-and-click adventure legend Charles Cecil. Sumo doesn't have much of a track record in this field, having mainly done arcade racers up to now. But the involvement of Cecil, who made the seminal Broken Sword games, gives it a sheen of respectability.
Bigwigs at the Beeb are blowing hard on the integration of the games with the current series. "By integrating the creation of these 'interactive episodes' with the development of the TV series, we've been able to create amazing two-hour dramas in which you control the action," said Simon Nelson, head of BBC Multiplatform in Vision (whatever that might be).
Keen to justify spending the licence fee on the Daily Mail's bete noire -- video games -- Nelson added, "We're aiming to encourage the family to gather round the PC or Mac in the same way they do the television. Driving computer literacy is a keystone of the BBC's public service remit."
Having said all that, details about what the games will be like are thin on the ground. The episode titles haven't been revealed, nor even what genre they'll fit in. Will they be like old-fashioned CD-ROM full-motion adventures, or point-and-click puzzles like Cecil's Beneath a Steel Sky? The picture above shows the Doctor and Amy thrillingly pushing a cab out of a bomb crater in Blitz-era London. Let us know in comments what you'd like to see from these Doctor Who games.
This isn't the first time the Doctor has appeared in a video game, of course. You'll all remember the interactive tour de force that was 2008's Top Trumps: Doctor Who for PC, PlayStation 2 and Nintendo DS.
The first game -- sorry, episode -- will be available for download from the Doctor Who site in June.