10 TV Shows That Need Videogame Versions
We’ve been turning TV shows into videogames for as long as videogames have existed. What is Pong but a home version of Bobby Riggs and Billie Jean King’s Battle of the Sexes? This particular artform has reached its apotheosis with South Park: The Stick of Truth, a role-playing game written by Trey Parker and Matt Stone that looks almost indistinguishable from the TV show. (Videogame technology has finally reached the point where it can realistically delineate fake cardboard.) Stick of Truth looks, sounds and (in most ways) feels like a playable episode of South Park, for better or for worse. It gives us hope for the future of the TV show videogame adaptation. Here are a few programs we would love to see turned into a game with the same loving care as Stick of Truth.
1. Night Court
The obvious temptation is to turn Night Court into a Phoenix Wright-style legal adventure, where the player takes control of Dan Fielding or Christine Sullivan and argues cases on behalf of the coterie of characters and cut-ups that circulate through New York’s judicial system after dark. Judge Harry Stone is the show’s star, though, and it’d be a missed opportunity to not let players experience first-hand the interior life of the Mel Torme-loving magician-judge. The solution would be a tripartite structure split between courtroom objections, crooner-scored card tricks and the quiet domestic drama of the increasingly distant home life of Mac and Quon Le. It’d be perfect for the Oculus Rift.
2. Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom
There have been safari games before, but no-one’s ever shelled out for the premier license in the wildlife market. Marlin Perkins must have been a shrewd businessman—he knew a ham-fisted 2600 adaptation would’ve hurt that brand in the long run. Sadly Perkins is no longer with us, but a state-of-the-art HD Wild Kingdom game could easily feature a virtual Marlin narrating the on-screen actions of a player-controlled virtual Jim Fowler. Imagine Kinectimals, but with the soothing presence of a television legend and master showman. What else are you going to do on a Sunday afternoon? It’d be perfect for the Oculus Rift.
3. Meet the Press
The longest running show in American television history has never had a videogame before. Respawn Entertainment needs to fix that. The geniuses behind the world’s most successful shooters possess the dedication and attention to detail needed to turn the public affairs show into a thrillingly visceral videogame experience. Imagine a scenario where two teams of wonks and flacks try to outflank each other’s political rhetoric on the crumbling set of NBC’s now-flagging institution, struggling to see who can capture David Gregory’s attention the longest. Only the makers of Modern Warfare and Titanfall could do this show justice. It’d be perfect for the Oculus Rift.
4. This Week in Baseball
You’d think there’d be a baseball videogame by now. It just kind of makes sense. It’s already a kind of game. But a game about talking about baseball makes even more sense. TWiB: The Game would finally give all us non-singers a reason to use one of the 20 USB microphones laying around our garage. You’d cut up and edit together the hottest baseball highlights of the week, providing your own “How about that?!” call as needed. You could then share your custom reel with your social media buddies and your smart phone pals and the people that you call your friends and loved ones and co-workers and the like. One major flaw: you can only play it when it’s raining. It’d be perfect for the Virtual Boy.