![]() ![]() “This group of games industry experts (hailing from animation to production) tackles this important quandary, discussing examples of lip-locking from video games throughout the ages and rating them on a very scientific scale of ‘wow that’s a janky smooch’ to ‘believable snog’.” The panel synopsis sets you up for exactly what you can expect, detailing how: Thus, the panel ‘ Rating the Making (Out): The Best Smooches in Video Games‘ was born. We all come a’ flocking down to the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre to spend three days playing through demos of up and coming games, admiring unconventional PC builds, collecting pins and watching panels. If you’re gonna kiss an alien, they better sweep you off your feet.īut that’s okay, because over the course of PAX Australia this weekend (11th to the 13th of October) in Melbourne, a panel of esteemed, maybe slightly randy judges are going to evaluate the best pixellated pashes once and for all.įor the uninitiated, PAX Australia stands for Penny Arcade Expo, and it’s essentially Christmas for Australian nerds (myself included). ![]() Movies might have it right most of the time, so what about video games? This is a medium that allows us to CHOOSE if we want to get our mack on, but is it all capable of getting that reaction? Sadly no. It’s science.īut not all of those smooches are worthy of a cheeky junk shudder. Cinematic movies pluck tears from our eyes at their sheer beauty, the image of a whirling snowstorm conjures goosebumps, and watching people pash gets us all tingly in our nethers. As visual creatures, we humans are hardwired to derive emotional responses from things we see.
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