From the Zola System

alexzola

alexzola
Location
New York, New York, USA
Birthday
January 30
Bio
I grew up in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, in the Zola System, my father’s philosophy of life. He taught my brothers and me the basic life skills: how to run a street hustle, perpetrate a con or recognize when you were being hustled or conned; information we needed so we could feed our families if another Hitler came to power. My father Aron Zola was a Romanian Jew, a holocaust survivor, a black marketeer, a gun runner, a successful entrepreneur, a true citizen of Detroit. When I was 18, I rebelled against the Zola System and moved to New York City. I was fascinated with cultural heroes – Lou Reed, Bob Dylan, Jack Kerouac, Hunter S. Thompson and the aesthetic bohemian artist lifestyle that, in my naivete, I thought they lived. Now I see they were working their own hustles on the public, just like the Old Man. Even the Manhattan dating scene runs on the Zola System. To paraphrase Mark Twain, now that the Old Man is dead, I’m shocked how much he learned. I wrote reviews for SPIN, an unpublished brunch guide for New York City, covered the death penalty, reviewed books for the New York Law Journal and profiled sports stars for the Jewish Forward. I have two crime novels and a bartenders guide to New York City that I am trying to sell. After dabbling in so many genres, I finally realized I’d been running from my subject: my father and the Zola System. The Old Man is gone now and I am his eldest son carrying on as he wanted me to do. This was not supposed to happen.

MY RECENT POSTS

Alexzola's Links

New list
APRIL 8, 2011 12:24AM

Why I Like Angry Birds

Rate: 1 Flag

The puzzle destruction video game Angry Birds has become an international sensation. Initially created for the iPhone and iPad, the games popularity has forced the Rovio, the games maker, to include the Droid, Palm and Sony Play Station 3 platforms as well.  The game is so popular Rovio Mobile is considering an Angry Birds IPO.

The game itself is wickedly simple.  Evil pigs have stolen eggs from some wingless, no very pissed off birds.  In order to keep these eggs, the green mucus colored pigs are hidden in various city construction detritus.  Various species of birds, each a different color with a different style of movement, jump into a slingshot and are flung by the player at the wood, ice, cement etc.  The pigs are killed when the material or birds land on them and a level is finished when all the pigs are killed.

As of this writing, there are three total Angry Birds apps available for purchase: the original, Angry Birds Seasons a holiday themed affair and the new Angry Birds Rio.  I have been hooked on this game every since my pal Liz Georges Emrich giddily told me to down the app from iTunes, playing on average a half hour a day.

The game is so simple, colorful and well, stupid…just how could a grown man get hooked into all this video game destruction?  Wasn’t it supposed to go the way of playing with fireworks before the 4th of July around age 13?  (Ok, I still do that too but still…)  According to an app study published by Awesome Giant (below), there are four reasons why Angry Birds is all the rage:

1. High Production Value

 

Let's face it, there's nothing worse than putting out a cheap looking app. Quality design for apps can be one of the factors that help it stand out from the crowd.  Even if the app does amazing things, if the production value is cheap it's going to be hard to rise in the charts.  Angry Birds has done a great job of coming up with characters that are simultaneously unique, cute, and angry, appeals to both male & female demographic, and creates environments with high quality illustration and detail. Truly a well made app that was thought out from all angles.

 

2. Quality Sound Design

Another tell-tale sign of a cheaply made app is the sound design.  You know, the free midi files someone downloaded off a horrible site with hundreds of free sounds.  We don't want that, we want to hear original sounds that are pleasant to the ear.  In the case of Angry Birds, they have carefully thought out all the sound effects.  Since the game involves launching birds at solid structures, we get total satisfaction with the sound effects through that whole process:  Slingshot sounds, bird flying sounds, contact sounds, and broken structures.  All this gives the end-user instant satisfaction and feedback, even if you totally miss.  The sounds really help make the game FUN.

 

3. Endless Interesting Levels

I know there must be an end to this game, but seriously there are so many levels that it feels like endless play. It goes on and on and on.  As if that's not enough the publisher keeps putting out updates with new levels!  It's not enough to just put out more of the same though, what makes this work is that new levels come with new stuff... different kinds of birds, structures, challenges, environments.  So it stays interesting and new.

 

4. Easy, Yet Challenging

Perhaps the most important ingredient the game has mastered is that it is easy enough to do well, especially in the first dozens of levels, so you get immediate gratification.  Yet it has a slow building difficulty curve which keeps you challenged and dying to beat that level!   Also there is no learning curve, nothing to figure out before you play. You just dive in and start shooting those birds.  Some levels really are very difficult, but because you've built up the skills early on, it keeps you working to beat yet another level.   A very delicate balance between success, fun, and challenge, which the game gets exactly right.

 

The above analysis is, in your occasional intrepid blogger’s opinion, the same reason Space Invaders was popular lo those many years ago.  Thus, some may conclude that Generation X and Y are crazy about this app/game because of nostalgia.  And they maybe right.

Me?  There is no nostalgia for me about Angry Birds.  I’m in it to kill the pigs, like a good Jew should.

(Hat Tip: Jim Chesna)

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
Totally agree with all your points. I love how simple the game is. My 4-year-old loves playing it, and he's almost as good as I am at it now.