9780472075225-0472075225-Mortal Kombat: Games of Death (Landmark Video Games)

Mortal Kombat: Games of Death (Landmark Video Games)

ISBN-13: 9780472075225
ISBN-10: 0472075225
Author: David Church
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Format: Hardcover 170 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780472075225
ISBN-10: 0472075225
Author: David Church
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Format: Hardcover 170 pages

Summary

Mortal Kombat: Games of Death (Landmark Video Games) (ISBN-13: 9780472075225 and ISBN-10: 0472075225), written by authors David Church, was published by University of Michigan Press in 2022. With an overall rating of 3.8 stars, it's a notable title among other Games & Strategy Guides (Communication & Media Studies, Social Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent Mortal Kombat: Games of Death (Landmark Video Games) (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Games & Strategy Guides books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.39.

Description

Review
“The book captures the excitement and dynamism of actually playing Mortal Kombat while describing the game, its appeal for players, and the reasons why the establishment (parents, cultural critics, US senators) found it objectionable. Church places Mortal Kombat squarely in its sociopolitical context to introduce the game to the general reader.”
—Rachael Hutchinson, University of Delaware -- Rachael Hutchinson, University of Delaware
Upon its premiere in 1992, Midway’s Mortal Kombat spawned an enormously influential series of fighting games, notorious for their violent “fatality” moves performed by photorealistic characters. Targeted by lawmakers and moral reformers, the series directly inspired the creation of an industrywide rating system for video games and became a referendum on the wide popularity of 16-bit home consoles. Along the way, it became one of the world’s most iconic fighting games, and formed a transmedia franchise that continues to this day.
This book traces Mortal Kombat’s history as an American product inspired by both Japanese video games and Chinese martial-arts cinema, its successes and struggles in adapting to new market trends, and the ongoing influence of its secret-strewn narrative world. After outlining the specific elements of gameplay that differentiated Mortal Kombat from its competitors in the coin-op market, David Church examines the various martial-arts films that inspired its Orientalist imagery, helping explain its stereotypical uses of race and gender. He also posits the games as a cultural landmark from a moment when public policy attempted to intervene in both the remediation of cinematic aesthetics within interactive digital games and in the transition of public gaming spaces into the domestic sphere. Finally, the book explores how the franchise attempted to conquer other forms of media in the 1990s, lost ground to a new generation of 3D games in the 2000s, and has successfully rebooted itself in the 2010s to reclaim its legacy.

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