ACG is pleased to be given an opportunity to interview Paul McCauley about the game Heaven. In the interview, McCauley speaks candidly on the biblical inspiration behind the game, the long development history of the project, the biblical messages which he wants to convey to his audience, and perhaps most importantly, what truly lies in Heaven.
Fudzilla gives a fairly in-depth review of Nvidia's new high-end GeForce GTX 480 GPU. Pitted against ATI's high-end Radeon 5870, the GTX 480 outperforms it quite well.
This is more or less what I expected. Sure it is a bit faster than the 5870, but its more expensive, very hot, and uses a lot more power than its competition.
Originally Nvidia planned on having 512 stream processors on the GTX 480, but they had to cut it down to 480 due to manufacturing constraints. Perhaps a future revision (GTX 490?) will come with all 512 stream processors, although I wouldn't expect that to improve performance drastically.
Either way this card is good news as it can help bring down the price of ATI's current DirectX 11 hardware.
No point in getting rid of my dual 285GTX overclocked editions any time yet then. Expected it to be more powerful than this. I guess it wont be too long until the 600 cards arrive with some newer tech. This technology is reaching it's limits, look at those temps!
good lord! 65 degrees when idle? My 5870 only goes to 65-68 degrees (depending on room temperature) after several hours of Crysis, GTA4 etc.
McCauley has tackled a controversial topic with grace in this game. Rather than preaching to believers and non-believers alike in a direct or confronting way, his objective as a dedicated Christian is to simply express in the game his own belief that there is a caring God, Jesus, and other spiritual beings, and that those who share this belief can all share in everlasting life in paradise. Heaven is not a game for everyone. If you are a believer, you will enjoy this game. If you a complete non-believer, this game is not for you.
Overall, Heaven is a clear example of style without substance. The machinery sounds realistic, but the puzzles they offer are simple and dull. The locations look amazing, but there's no real reason to explore them other than to "make your way to the throne of Jesus". Grandma is easy on the eyes, but a wildly inappropriate choice as a spiritual tour guide. The heavy-handed religious message, meanwhile, will perhaps appeal to like-minded Christians, but will almost certainly put off everyone else.
And at a surprisingly hefty price tag from the official website, the game is simply far too short, clocking in at only a handful of hours at best. Though many may be called, few will find Heaven worth buying for the gorgeous visuals alone. Hopefully the real Heaven will have better games to play.