And anyone who sees the introduction of the CD medium on console systems as only a footnote in video gaming needs to have their head examined. It completely changed how games would be developed and contributed fully to the video game as an art form.
Precisely. Its use of the CD allowed for voices, animation, cut scenes, and music the likes of which were rarely seen before and certainly not in such quantities; if that isn't advancing video game art with 'striking visuals, creative use of new technology, and influential artists and designers', then I don't know what is. Even worse is their complete omission of arcade games; early on you went to the arcade to see cutting edge artwork and stayed at home for watered down ports and imitations, yet arcades apparently don't even merit a mention. Now I understand not having room for everything, yet they found room for the Wii and the GameCube, neither of which are pushing the art envelope at all (
Boom Blox, really?!?).
Plus, their selection of games is suspect. Why include console ports of PC games (
Dune, Command and Conquer, and
Sim City), and are they really saying that console ports of arcade games were influencing anything? f*ck 'em! I refuse to vote on grounds that it's little more than a exhibit of "games that people really liked playing at home" - artwork be damned.