Disabled Gaming

Anything that is gaming related that doesn't fit well anywhere else
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Key-Glyph
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by Key-Glyph »

Siren wrote:I was fortunate enough to be born into an era that has the medical advances strong enough to help me to wrestle with this and win.
I feel similarly all the time. Beautifully worded.

Thanks for sharing your stories, everybody.

Did any of you identify with or admire certain characters or stories because you felt they paralleled your situation? I used to pretend that my migraines were the symptom of my nascent mutant powers, à la the X-Men. I would say to my friends, "Any day now my superpower is going to surface... and it's gonna be awesome."
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TornadoCreator
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by TornadoCreator »

Key-Glyph wrote:
Siren wrote:I was fortunate enough to be born into an era that has the medical advances strong enough to help me to wrestle with this and win.
I feel similarly all the time. Beautifully worded.

Thanks for sharing your stories, everybody.

Did any of you identify with or admire certain characters or stories because you felt they paralleled your situation? I used to pretend that my migraines were the symptom of my nascent mutant powers, à la the X-Men. I would say to my friends, "Any day now my superpower is going to surface... and it's gonna be awesome."
Yeah, but at this point I've come to the conclusion that my super-power is simply too awesome to let me have it as it'd be unfair to the rest of you mortals to make me so absolutely uber-pwn. After all, EDS has done a lot to my body, the constant pain, well that's a sign of my latent Wolverine like healing, the dislocations, that's a sign of my elastic body ala Mr. Fantastic, my inability to control my body temperature is an indication of my Iceman powers, the migrains are a sign of my Prof. X psychic abilities and the occational blackouts is my brain ajusting to the possibility of a Nightcrawler esq teleportation that's about to happen...

In all seriousness, I always felt like that though yes. I did relate to the Xmen and similar things because it's a tale about being "different". The alagory is obviously about being gay. Something that can't be seen but makes you different, that you're born with but don't really come to terms with till your teens, that a lot of people hate you for without reason, and that you never asked for. Some cases like Beast and Mystique are examples of racism with the "blue" thing being more obvious, but it's always been about sexuality. The new film makes this so obvious with Hank and his boss when he says "You never told me you where a mutant" and Hank replies "You didn't ask, I didn't tell"... I don't suppose the creators realised how much this alagory fit for the disabled though and it's good that it does, that people can relate to things in different ways to personally get the most out of it. This is why I want them to keep it vague as a referrence. Sure gays need support as there's a lot of hatred still, but there's already loads of stuff out there for gay people to relate to, keeping this up for interpretation makes it much more valuable I think.

One other thing that I found a great connection to was the film Unbreakable. Samuel L. Jacksons character Elijah Prince has Osteogenesis Imperfecta which is a COL1 Classified Collagen Dissorder. There are only 2 Collagen disoders that are classified as COL1 dissorders and those are Osteogenesis Imperfecta, and Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome... as you can imagine, I relate to this character so much.
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AppleQueso

Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by AppleQueso »

^actually, X-Men was originally a racism allegory that slowly shifted to a gay allegory as the times changed.
TornadoCreator
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by TornadoCreator »

AppleQueso wrote:^actually, X-Men was originally a racism allegory that slowly shifted to a gay allegory as the times changed.
Oh right, I assumed it was an equality analogy based on homosexuality that occationally makes mention to racism... but it does kinda make sense that it started as the latter...
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by BurningDoom »

My brother is partially hemipalegic (among many other disabilities). This basically means he has a whole lot of trouble using the right side of his body, he walks with a limp and basically uses his left-hand only.

He does play video games. He uses his left-hand only for the controller. It's freaking amazing. He just switches the D-Pad/thumbstick end of the controller with the action-buttons end of the controller back and forth in his left-hand really quickly, and that's how he plays. He's not as good as me at gaming, but if I was limited to one hand like him he would kick the crap out of me.
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Inazuma
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by Inazuma »

BurningDoom wrote:My brother is partially hemipalegic (among many other disabilities). This basically means he has a whole lot of trouble using the right side of his body, he walks with a limp and basically uses his left-hand only.

He does play video games. He uses his left-hand only for the controller. It's freaking amazing. He just switches the D-Pad/thumbstick end of the controller with the action-buttons end of the controller back and forth in his left-hand really quickly, and that's how he plays. He's not as good as me at gaming, but if I was limited to one hand like him he would kick the crap out of me.
Wouldn't it be a lot easier to just use a one handed controller?
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BurningDoom
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by BurningDoom »

Inazuma wrote:
BurningDoom wrote:My brother is partially hemipalegic (among many other disabilities). This basically means he has a whole lot of trouble using the right side of his body, he walks with a limp and basically uses his left-hand only.

He does play video games. He uses his left-hand only for the controller. It's freaking amazing. He just switches the D-Pad/thumbstick end of the controller with the action-buttons end of the controller back and forth in his left-hand really quickly, and that's how he plays. He's not as good as me at gaming, but if I was limited to one hand like him he would kick the crap out of me.
Wouldn't it be a lot easier to just use a one handed controller?
Didn't know they existed. It would probably just confuse him anyways since he's been gaming since the NES like myself and is also mentally disabled.
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Inazuma
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by Inazuma »

BurningDoom wrote: Didn't know they existed. It would probably just confuse him anyways since he's been gaming since the NES like myself and is also mentally disabled.


ASCII made similar controllers for many other systems. I have seen them for the Famicom, PS1, PS2 and Saturn.

Lots of systems have adapters that let you use PS2 controllers. Maybe you can use this idea to figure out solutions for consoles that don't have a one handed controller.
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by Czernobog »

So I recently started working for a couple hours every day with special needs children at an elementary school. Mostly the kids have varying degrees of autism. There's a couple nonverbal children and a couple who have some behavior issues, but it's a pretty good group of kids overall.

One of the really little guys loves Mario, comes in with different Mario shirts everyday, and asks me if I can be Luigi while he's Mario. He has a Mario Kart lunch box and pretends it's a cart wheel so that he can pretend to drive around after he's done eating. He looked at me today and said that Goombas are misunderstood turtles. :lol:

Some of the other kids have told me they like games which are calming (makes sense because most of the kids have heightened emotions). But what really caught my attention is one of the kids told me him and his dad like to play Sonic on Genny! When I asked him what else him and his dad played he said "Ecco the ocean game" and The Lion King.
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Re: Disabled Gaming

Post by Key-Glyph »

That's such a cute story, Czernobog. Good for you for getting into that line of work!

I volunteered for a summer at a special needs camp, and this one boy loved it when I did my best Crazy Taxi impression. Your friend who loves playing pretend Mario Kart reminded me of that. :D
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