MTV's Stephen
Totilo reports on big ideas coming out of the annual Game Developers Conference. Forget the next-gen hoopla expected
from Sony and Nintendo later this week, yesterday was all about "Serious Games." Take, for example, an
abortion game being developed by Georgia Tech's Experimental Game Lab, where mini-games range from "find a
condom" to balancing your reputation with friends, your baby's health and your future earning power. Georgia
Tech's Ian Bogost claims that the game's real innovation is its ability to present multiple angles of an issue. The
game is designed to change depending on a given player's biases. So, if a player is shown to express pro-life
tendencies, the game will stress the importance of personal responsibility and adoption.Also on tap were presentations that featured GPS-enabled cell phone games that encourage obese youths to actively explore their neighborhoods while hunting for virtual prizes, technology that monitors players' brainwaves and rewards those that are paying attention, and a climbing wall that doubles as a game controller.

