Chain World Videogame – Holy Performance Art

Bigger Than Jesus
by Jason Fagone
Wired
July 15, 2011

When Jason Rohrer created his Chain World videogame, he intended it to be a religion. He just didn’t expect a hold war.

Jason Rohrer is known as much for his eccentric lifestyle as for the brilliant, unusual games he designs. He lives mostly off the grid in the desert town of Las Cruces, New Mexico. He doesn”t own a car or believe in vaccination. The 33-year-old works out of a home office, typing code in a duct-taped chair. He takes his son Mez to gymnastics and acting class on his lime-green recumbent bicycle, and on weekends he paints with his son Ayza. (He got Mez”s name from a license plate, and Ayza”s by mixing up Scrabble tiles.)

On the morning of February 24, Rohrer took a break from coding and pedaled to the local Best Buy. He paid $19.99 for a 4-gigabyte USB memory stick sheathed in black plastic. The next day he sanded off the memory stick”s logos, giving it a brushed-metal texture that reminded him of something out of Mad Max. Then, using his kids” acrylics, he painted a unique pattern on both sides, a chain of dots that resembled a piece of Aboriginal art he had seen.

The stick would soon hold a videogame unlike any other ever created. It would exist on the memory stick and nowhere else. According to a set of rules defined by Rohrer, only one person on earth could play the game at a time. The player would modify the game”s environment as they moved through it. Then, after the player died in the game, they would pass the memory stick to the next person, who would play in the digital terrain altered by their predecessor””and on and on for years, decades, generations, epochs. In Rohrer”s mind, his game would share many qualities with religion””a holy ark, a set of commandments, a sense of secrecy and mortality and mystical anticipation. This was the idea, anyway, before things started to get weird. Before Chain World, like religion itself, mutated out of control. Continue reading “Chain World Videogame – Holy Performance Art”

Pastafarian Al Dente

Update submitted by Chris V., July 15, 2011:

  • Austrian Pastafarian: License Photo Was A Win For Freedom From Religion

  • Submitted by Don B., July 13, 2011


    Austrian Man Wins Right To Wear Pasta Strainer In License Photo
    NPR
    by Eyder Peralta
    July 13, 2011

    In Austria one of the strangest fights for religious freedom has come to an end: Niko Alm, a self-described “Pastafarian,” fought for three years for the right to wear a pasta strainer on his head in his driver’s license photo.

    His argument? Alm claimed he belonged to the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and wearing the strainer was part of his religion.

    The BBC reports:

    Mr Alm’s pastafarian-style application for a driving licence was a response to the Austrian recognition of confessional headgear in official photographs.

    The licence took three years to come through and, according to Mr. Alm, he was asked to submit to a medical interview to check on his mental fitness to drive but – straining credulity – his efforts have finally paid off.

    It is the police who issue driving licences in Austria, and they have duly issued a laminated card showing Mr. Alm in his unorthodox item of religious headgear.

    The AFP reports that Alm now wants to apply for “Pastafarianism to become an officially recognised faith in Austria.”

    If you want more, Alm detailed his fight on his blog. (We’ve linked to Google’s English translation of it.)


    Related posts:

  • https://artoftheprank.com/?s=pastafarian
  • Madison Police Play Along with Rapture Prank

    Rapture or prank? Clothing with burn marks found at Olin-Turville Park
    State Journal, Capital Times
    May 26, 2011

    Did the Rapture happen in Madison after all?

    Do we finally have evidence of alien abduction?

    Or was it the work of a clever band of artistic pranksters?

    Clothing with apparent burn marks along with such personal effects as wallets, watches and keys was found Sunday on the largest hill of Olin-Turville Park, according to a Madison police report that quickly gained attention Thursday, circulating on Facebook, Twitter and media websites.

    But a simple Google search revealed that people across the world undertook similar actions in response to the declaration by a fringe California preacher that last Saturday certain Christians would be transported to heaven.

    Madison police spokesman Joel DeSpain played along, writing an uncharacteristically long and descriptive report that he posted to the Internet on Thursday afternoon. Continue reading “Madison Police Play Along with Rapture Prank”

    Portofess Goes High Tech

    Moderator’s note: Joey Skaggs brought “Religion on the move for people on the go” with his mobile confessional booth, Portofess, in 1992. Now confessing has gone high tech.


    Submitted by Alex Case:

    Just when you think it can’t get any weirder… I think we should counter with I-dulgence: a new way to pay for your sins, as a small amount of money is regularly deducted from your credit card or bank account…


    Catholic church gives blessing to iPhone app
    BBC News
    8 February 2011

    The Catholic Church has approved an iPhone app that helps guide worshippers through confession.

    The Confession program has gone on sale through iTunes for £1.19 ($1.99).

    Described as “the perfect aid for every penitent”, it offers users tips and guidelines to help them with the sacrament.

    Now senior church officials in both the UK and US have given it their seal of approval, in what is thought to be a first.

    The app takes users through the sacrament – in which Catholics admit their wrongdoings – and allows them to keep track of their sins.

    It also allows them to examine their conscience based on personalised factors such as age, sex and marital status – but it is not intended to replace traditional confession entirely.

    Instead, it encourages users to understand their actions and then visit their priest for absolution.

    Read the rest of this article here.