of course, it also depends on the book, sometimes you just can't get into something and have to put it aside for later *cough*First Among Sequels*cough* or it's just a trainwreck that you want to finish (Kevin J Anderson's latest ppb).
I stopped playing computer games, uninstalled them all, because I got addicted. Forced myself to just stop. Good thing, too.
Watching a film in a mostly empty cinema on your own, or watching something on TV alone in the dark is very different to a packed Friday night cinema filled with chatting neds and your mates telling rude jokes over the popcorn.
Computer games and books I -tend- to find more immersive because I am usually playing/reading alone. Of course, some computer games are more immersive than others.
The cinema, regrettably, usually has other people in it... and I don't watch much TV these days. I guess it could be immersive, but it's usually just a bit shit.
Radio I don't listen to really any more, but is good for people who haven't been too conditioned by this modern age to need images. There could be gender issues there too. I don't find comics particularly immersive in the main, but most of them are either badly written or badly drawn. The -good- ones are easily as immersive as good books.
The peak of my immersion scale is playing a tabletop RPG, but books come a close second, followed fairly distantly by movies. However, I suspect that full sensory VR, or even just believable audio-visual VR might well trump books.
Books (including comic books) stimulate my mind to generate data to run through the unused brain cycles. Video games, as far as I can tell, simply use up most of the brain cycles.
If I'm depressed, a book isn't usually a good escape for me. They put me in contact with my subconscious mind. Video games usually don't, but they do generate random data that goes back in later.
If I were to only have access either to books or video games for a year, I'd pick books in a heartbeat. If I were to have access to only one book or one video game for a day or two, I'd pick a video game...
Television and movies are a third category. Most of the time these days I seem to be too hyperactive for non-interactive watchable media, but good television can be used to generate a form of gnosis; it's also inspiring in the same way books are.
And radio is just goddamn irritating here -- too many commercials, all targeted at suburban parasites who've got things I haven't -- kids, mortgages, cars, intestinal flus, none of which I want to hear about, so the ad spots are like having your really annoying neighbor's kvetching piped into your house. No thanks.
I reluctantly picked movies, because an excellent book can be more engrossing than a movie, but a mediocre movie can be pretty darned engrossing. I have yet to dodge and duck in my seat because of anything I've read.
From that perspective, I'd have to put computer games next.
If you asked me which one I couldn't live without, I'd definitely take books, though.
With the exception of radio, I would have to to say each of them have been either at some point. What I find most immersive today could change totally by tomorrow :) I think many people would find it difficult to give a definitive answer.
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of course, it also depends on the book, sometimes you just can't get into something and have to put it aside for later *cough*First Among Sequels*cough* or it's just a trainwreck that you want to finish (Kevin J Anderson's latest ppb).
I stopped playing computer games, uninstalled them all, because I got addicted. Forced myself to just stop. Good thing, too.
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Everything that isn't wireframe is immersion-breaking.
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You go west. You are in a maze of twisty-turny passages, all alike. Exits are west, south, east and up.
>search
You search for a while. You find a box.
>get box
I don't understand that command.
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Computer games and books I -tend- to find more immersive because I am usually playing/reading alone. Of course, some computer games are more immersive than others.
The cinema, regrettably, usually has other people in it... and I don't watch much TV these days. I guess it could be immersive, but it's usually just a bit shit.
Radio I don't listen to really any more, but is good for people who haven't been too conditioned by this modern age to need images. There could be gender issues there too. I don't find comics particularly immersive in the main, but most of them are either badly written or badly drawn. The -good- ones are easily as immersive as good books.
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The Matrix
Reality
Dreams
The Society of the Spectacle
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Least immersive: Comics, they involve too much 'suspension of disbelief'.
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It depends. Depends on the game, depends on the book, depends on the movie, depends on my mood, the surroundings, the people around, and so on.
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I am, of course, in the spirit of Good or Bad:
http://coalescent.livejournal.com/429530.html
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Books (including comic books) stimulate my mind to generate data to run through the unused brain cycles. Video games, as far as I can tell, simply use up most of the brain cycles.
If I'm depressed, a book isn't usually a good escape for me. They put me in contact with my subconscious mind. Video games usually don't, but they do generate random data that goes back in later.
If I were to only have access either to books or video games for a year, I'd pick books in a heartbeat. If I were to have access to only one book or one video game for a day or two, I'd pick a video game...
Television and movies are a third category. Most of the time these days I seem to be too hyperactive for non-interactive watchable media, but good television can be used to generate a form of gnosis; it's also inspiring in the same way books are.
And radio is just goddamn irritating here -- too many commercials, all targeted at suburban parasites who've got things I haven't -- kids, mortgages, cars, intestinal flus, none of which I want to hear about, so the ad spots are like having your really annoying neighbor's kvetching piped into your house. No thanks.
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From that perspective, I'd have to put computer games next.
If you asked me which one I couldn't live without, I'd definitely take books, though.
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