Water Cooler Games served as the web's primary forum for "videogames with an agenda" — coverage of the uses of video games in advertising, politics, education, and other everyday activities, outside the sphere of entertainment.
The site was maintained at watercoolergames.org from 2003-2009, where it was edited by myself and Gonzalo Frasca. It is now archived here in full.
I have the Fossil Atari Asteroids watch. I don't wear a watch very often (usually I just check the time on my mobile phone), but I can't help but think one reason I don't wear it more is that the Asteroids feature is non-functional; to quote the product page, "Actual Asteroids game is not playable, but the dial animates and shows the game being played on a black background." Slightly more sophisticated than an Atari-branded watch, but not much more.
Enter high-end Swiss watchmaker Girard-Perregaux, who recently announced the new 1945 Jackpot Tourbillon. This is a completely mechanical watch with a working three-chamber slot machine built into the mechanism. You can pull a small lever to the right of the face to spin the chambers. Of course, to play games of chance on your wristwatch, you'll have to be able to afford the ante. No price for the Jackpot Tourbillon has been announced, but other timepieces in the Vintage 1945 series run $5k-10k.
It does make me wonder what opportunities for wristwatch games have gone unexplored. Sure, there were the Nintendo Game & Watch handhelds of the early 1980s, but those were hardly watches. Perhaps we've been too busy focusing on the elusive and frustrating mobile game market to recognize the opportunity in wristwatch gaming.
Information is Beautiful
The Art History of Games
The Art History of Games
Objects & Things
Object-Oriented Ontology Symposium
Comments
Ian Bogost on Information is Beautiful
Aaron Lanterman on Information is Beautiful
Shane on Information is Beautiful
nick on Information is Beautiful
Federico Fasce on Information is Beautiful






