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July 24, 2008

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KidScreen Poll

Time Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt has recently gone on record to say that he has a problem with nets streaming free full-length eps of content online. Some suggest that the US cable carriers may start witholding subscriber fees, cutting network revenues, if the practice continues. Do you think the situation will affect original kids TV production in the US?
Yes, when the networks lose money production budgets suffer
Maybe, if the MSOs and the Networks can't reach an online rev-share model
No, the networks need new content to drive viewership and online traffic

Current Newsletter Current Magazine Archives Date/Topic KidScreen Conferences

November 1, 2007 - KidScreen Magazine
Digital Bytes


Game to watch: Drawn to Life

by Emily Claire Afan

page 32

Customization in video games definitely isn't a new concept - but choosing hair colors and T-shirt styles is destined for obsolescence now that Drawn to Life is on the market. THQ's first original property for the Nintendo DS platform takes the Wii's popular Mii avatars to the next level, letting users draw their own characters and game environments from scratch with the DS stylus.

The app offers an endless array of colors, brush types, guides and stamps so gamers can tailor-make an avatar in their own image, or plumb the depths of their imaginations to play as human-like fantastical creatures and beasties. And as a character moves through the game to save a village from being overrun by evil forces, the stylus becomes a valuable tool for shifting the outcome of the story. For instance, a player can draw a bubble helmet around their hero's head so he won't drown, or scribble moving platforms in the sky so he won't fall to his death.

Developed by 5th Cell, Drawn to Life, which hit retail in the fall, also offers multicard play with the Nintendo DS Wi-Fi connection, so gamers can swap drawings and trade heroes with friends.

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