
Where is gaming now and where will it be in the future, no one knows. But Gamerabies.com Opinions Editor, Friar, takes a look at what steps need to happen in order for video games to elevate their status in popular culture.

When I first heard about this game I was completely bewildered. Why would someone want to make a game based off of the 1999 massacre of 15 students at Columbine High School? Although the idea was outrageous I decided, against my better judgement, to play the game and experience what it had to offer. Yet what I did experience was an oddly short and bland game that struggled to keep my attention despite the subject matter.
I don't get why people would stoop this low to make a game based off a horrific event.
Its a fine line.
Free speech on one end but the hurt it causes the victims family on the other.
Its the same with those serial killer movies like the freeway serial killer movie. If I was a family member of the the victims I would find the director and literally punch him in the face.

If a game does well in conveying another person’s tribulations and putting you in his/her shoes, it counts as an empathy game.

Games are an evolving medium. Every year we see innovations
on how these technologies are used and the types of stories
being told through them. Sometimes those stories arn't happy
ones, but games are the best language to hear them in.