Good story games?

Discussion in 'General Game Discussion and Questions' started by davestephans, Sep 30, 2017.

  1. davestephans

    davestephans New Member

    Sep 30, 2017
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    #1 davestephans, Sep 30, 2017
    Last edited: Dec 12, 2017
    After retiring from the national tabletennis group of China when Wang Chen immigrated to the United States in 2000, she never imagined she'd keep playing in her nation. However, in 1988, when many professional gamers have stopped competing, she began where she reached the quarterfinals became an Olympic sport at 26 http://bestpingpongpaddles.com/.

    Wang wasn't alone. A look at table tennis clubs throughout the last few decades reveals hundreds of Chinese players that took their game abroad. More often than not, they became the best players wherever they landed.

    Now, however, Wang represents an endangered breed of player. Following the Beijing Games, the sport's governing body, the International Table Tennis Federation, based waiting periods and other restrictions to make it tougher for players after moving to represent states that were new. The I.T.T.F. said it did so since the widespread presence of Chinese gamers on national teams across the globe hindered the development of local talent.

    For decades, China has become the powerhouse of the sport. When the I.T.T.F. recognized China over Taiwan in 1953, that was enough for Chairman Mao Zedong to gather a system for churning out an army of superplayers who might dominate the game. Plus they did: China has won a vast majority of world titles in the previous 50 years and 20 of 24 Olympic gold medals. In Rotterdam, Sunday, in which the world championships began, the Chinese team featured several of the top five ranked each of the top five girls and men in singles competition. (Germany, with Timo Boll at No. 2, has the only other top-ranked player.)

    Since China has a deep pool of talent, opportunity is rare there, and this explains the reason so many Chinese names appear on the rosters of other national teams in the worlds, such as Argentina, Austria, Australia, Canada, the Dominican Republic, France, the Netherlands, Poland, Singapore, Spain, Turkey and Ukraine. But with the constraints, players of warrior dominate in the USA, although many are the kids of immigrants, homegrown players.

    Among the very best players of this new American-born generation is Adam Hugh, who with his mom, Lily Yip, after a provincial team player started training at 9 in China who came after immigrating to dominate United States table tennis in the 1990s.

    A Princeton graduate increased in New Jersey and Florida, 23, Hugh, was one of the more than 800 players competing. (He, in addition to the rest of the United States group, did not make it beyond the initial rounds in singles competition.) The I.T.T.F.'s regulation was meant to give greater opportunity to native-born players like him.

    "I don't have any complaints regarding the principle," Hugh explained.

    One of the three Chinese-American men in Rotterdam on the United States team, there is one participant, Yiyong Fan, 42, whom Hugh explains as being in a league of his own. The women's team has four United States-born Chinese-Americans, Judy, such as Hugh's sister.

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    Another star of Hugh's generation who competed in the worlds was Timothy Wang of Houston. Last year, the United States singles name was won by him. Together with his Chinese trainer, he has been training six hours a day, six to seven days weekly. Wang, like many young players, also trains in China, where he will be this summer.

    "The practice in China is much more systematic," his dad, Sam Wang, stated. " That is how players really can strengthen their match."

    No one knows the intricacies of the cutthroat table tennis world better than Wang Chen of China. Glancing behind her desk in her desk tennisclub on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, she talked of having to drop out of school to join and turning pro.

    "Maybe it is a good system for producing expert table tennis players," she explained, "but I think they're giving up too much in life, like faculty and a future." - http://bestpingpongpaddles.com/tables-reviews/

    Another player born in China who had even greater success in the United States is David Zhuang, who came with his family in 1990, won the first of his six federal men's singles titles four decades afterwards, also at 44 competed in his third Olympics, at Beijing in 2008.

    "Table tennis is a psychological game such as chess, but lots of Americans play it as a physical game," he said. " In China, the trainer assesses the strategy you perform at each component of the game. It's all strategy and technique."

    Now Zhuang coaches time. He says he has not made a decision regarding his future as a participant, though lower-back and hip accidents will stop him.

    "I'm happy to see that the new generation is hitting on a higher level today," he explained. " However, I do not want to say I'm retired. Why? Because I can still win."

    With the Chinese-born generation of Zhuang and Wang on the way out, the area is launching for younger players that are American. However, not everybody agrees that the I.T.T.F.'s limitations, including three-to-seven-year waiting periods on immigrants under 21 and bars all other new arrivals from participate in its events, are great for the sport.

    [​IMG]

    "The drawback is that the younger generation might not have good partners to train with," stated the Romanian-born Teodor Gheorghe, chief operating officer of the U.S.A. Table Tennis Association and coach of the national women's group. " Table tennis is similar to a sparring venture sport. The professional Chinese gamers we've had on the team mentored the younger ones and helped them grow."

    However, Larry Hodges, a player, trainer and author of three novels and many articles on the game, sees it differently.

    "Players would train and train for decades under the top coaches, paying tens of thousands of dollars, and they then strike 20, and a few 35-year-old man who has been trained by the Chinese government comes along and the American kid can't make the group," he explained.

    Even though the I.T.T.F. changes have opened up the door for homegrown talent, that doesn't mean that players of Chinese ancestry still won't dominate national teams.

    At the Maryland Table Tennis Center, where Hodges coaches, about 75 percent of the junior players are American-born players of Chinese ancestry. Tong Tong Gong, among the prodigies, 13, is one of four boys to the cadet team.

    After Gong won his first championship when he was 8, his parents chose to make an investment in cultivating his talent.

    "A lot of my buddies see Ping-Pong as a recreational game That Needs little skill," Gong said. " That's the American attitude, but in China, it is the national game."

    And though lots of people in China are gravitating toward the bigger-ball games like basketball and soccer, the high status of table tennis there reveals no signs of decrease.

    Opportunities for professional players have really improved. Wang explained that fewer of them wanted to leave since they join leagues could get school scholarships and earn a great living. It wasn't that way when she made.

    She plans for her children - https://medium.com/@conghieu4690/best-ping-pong-tables-1d5067cc180

    "I Need to have two boys, and I'll give them Chinese instruction," she said. " But I still need them to go to Harvard."
     
  2. Nullzone

    Nullzone 👮 Spam Police 🚓

    Jul 12, 2013
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    Hi and welcome to TA.

    I don't know much about actual adventure games (think Zork or Myst) on iOS, so someone else needs to recommend those.
    However, I found both Bastion and Transistor fantastic and atmospheric storytelling, both highly recommended by yours truly.
     
  3. Talbs

    Talbs Well-Known Member

    May 1, 2011
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    King of dragon pass?
     
  4. metalcasket

    metalcasket Moderator
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    May 24, 2010
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    Deepest Circle, Hel
    Have you played The Journey Down (trilogy)? Just finished them yesterday and I'll say that the trilogy wraps up with one of the most fantastic endings. By that point it's all about story.
     

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