The Interactive Pasts Conference 2: Dunstan Lowe
Video presentation for the Interactive Pasts Conference 2, October 8-10 2018, Center for Sound and Vision.
Dunstan Lowe (University of Kent)
Ancient Greece and Rome in Fighting Videogames
The golden age of beat-em-up videogames, in arcade and console gaming in the 1980s and 1990s, has a large but neglected cast of Greek and Roman warriors. Gladiators and centurions represented Italy and Greece in worldwide tournaments such as Fighters History, reflecting the fantastical impressions of casual cultural tourists. There are traces of classical antiquity in the major franchises Street Fighter, Mortal Kombat, Killer Instinct, Tekken, and above all SoulCalibur, in which the Greek Sophitia is the chosen warrior of Hephaestus. Yet a range of marginal games are devoted entirely to ancient Rome or Greece, especially mythological-themed brawlers such as War Gods, Mythic Blades, or the notorious Bikini Karate Babes and Warriors of Elysia. At times the ancient world is literally a mere backdrop, as the Parthenon or Colosseum is incongruously overlaid with more contemporary spectacle. But this genre transforms this cultural background in surprising ways, exposing what it really means to audiences whose attention is focused on the foreground.