The third annual Desert Bus for Hope
By John Davison, GamePro
November 30, 2009 06:11 PM ET
Starting four days ago, Victoria-based comedy group LoadingReadyRun began their third annual Desert Bus for Hope charity video game marathon. Last year's marathon collected $70,423 over five
days, and all proceeds were donated to Child's Play, a Seattle charity that donates over a million dollars to Children's Hospitals
worldwide each year. This year LoadingReadyRun hopes to raise even more.
Desert Bus for Hope is a video-gaming marathon broadcast live on the internet by LoadingReadyRun, a sketch comedy group from
Victoria, BC. In the Sega CD game "Desert Bus", the player controls a virtual bus that drives an eight-hour-long strip of
highway between Tucson, Arizona, and Las Vegas, Nevada, on an endless loop. The game is a "verisimulator" - a tongue-in-cheek
parody of other simulation games which attempts to approximate the real-life situation of driving a coach bus as closely as
possible, including the associated tedium. The player is required only to ensure that the bus stays on the road: if they crash,
they are towed back to the start and have to try again. Originally part of "Penn & Teller's Smoke and Mirrors", Desert Bus
is considered by many to be the most boring video game ever created.
Viewers are asked to donate money via the desertbus.org website, and as the dollar total rises, so does the length of time
the team must continue driving the bus. According to Paul Saunders, one of the founding members of LoadingReadyRun, "The mixture
of generosity and spite is a really powerful thing." Viewers are encouraged to participate by e-mail or by live internet chat,
where they can ask questions of the crew, make requests, bid on donated prizes and become an active participant. To view the
telethon, donate money, or find more information, please visit www.desertbus.org.
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Starting four days ago, Victoria-based comedy group LoadingReadyRun began their third annual Desert Bus for Hope charity video game marathon. Last year's marathon collected $70,423 over five
days, and all proceeds were donated to Child's Play, a Seattle charity that donates over a million dollars to Children's Hospitals
worldwide each year. This year LoadingReadyRun hopes to raise even more.
Desert Bus for Hope is a video-gaming marathon broadcast live on the internet by LoadingReadyRun, a sketch comedy group from
Victoria, BC. In the Sega CD game "Desert Bus", the player controls a virtual bus that drives an eight-hour-long strip of
highway between Tucson, Arizona, and Las Vegas, Nevada, on an endless loop. The game is a "verisimulator" - a tongue-in-cheek
parody of other simulation games which attempts to approximate the real-life situation of driving a coach bus as closely as
possible, including the associated tedium. The player is required only to ensure that the bus stays on the road: if they crash,
they are towed back to the start and have to try again. Originally part of "Penn & Teller's Smoke and Mirrors", Desert Bus
is considered by many to be the most boring video game ever created.
Viewers are asked to donate money via the desertbus.org website, and as the dollar total rises, so does the length of time
the team must continue driving the bus. According to Paul Saunders, one of the founding members of LoadingReadyRun, "The mixture
of generosity and spite is a really powerful thing." Viewers are encouraged to participate by e-mail or by live internet chat,
where they can ask questions of the crew, make requests, bid on donated prizes and become an active participant. To view the
telethon, donate money, or find more information, please visit www.desertbus.org.
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