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REZ

REZ is a video game released by SEGA in 2002 for the Sony Playstation 2. It was also released on the Sega Dreamcast, but only in Japan and PAL markets. The game was developed by SEGA's United Game Artists division. It was very critically acclaimed, but did not get much commercial attention in the United States, partly due to its very esoteric gameplay experience. The game is set in a vast computer network where a female AI program named Eden is lost, and must be found by the player by navigating through a series of levels, but the plot is really not the focus of this game. The gameplay is most strongly related to the shooter genre, with the player being portrayed as a figure moving fairly linearly ("on rails," so to speak) through levels of enemies. The controls are very simple, with the analog pad controlling a target that must be moved over the enemies while holding down the fire button. Releasing the button launches projectiles at the enemies and destroys them, and there are two power-ups; one that fires at all nearby enemies when triggered, and one that accumulates to transform your character into more powerful forms. There are bosses at the end of every level, which provide more of a challenge, and upon completion of the full "storyline" there are many bonus features that can be unlocked by the player by performing certain tasks. Marketing information for the game at the time of its release focused on its qualities of "synaesthesia," the association of different senses and stimuli with each other, which is a sensation experienced naturally by some people, and reported by many users of LSD and other hallucinogens. While playing REZ, your character soars over psychedelic futuristic vistas to the hypnotic beat of Japanese underground techno music. The game is indeed very integrated with sight and sound: a thumping vibration in the Dual Shock 2 controller keeps time with the music, every time the player releases the fire button sounds are made that synchronize exactly with the beat of the song, and as the player progresses further into a level, the songs become more layered and intense. REZ should not be played by anyone suffering from epilepsy, as it contains many flashing lights and images, and could trigger a seizure.

Trance vibrator

\nA "Special Package" version of the game was sold in Japan only, including a
USB device called a trance vibrator, which pulses in time with the music. While not explicitly marketed as a sex toy, it has enjoyed considerable success in that area; the devices are available from various aftermarket retailers for (as of 2004) approximately twenty-five USD. In contrast, any USB-controlled sex toys on the market are currently being retailed for over a hundred. Reverse-engineering efforts to allow the trance vibrator to attach to---and be controlled by---a PC have been mostly executed in Japanese, but seem to have been successful.

External links

\n*
official website\n* Sex in Games: Rez+Vibrator\n* PC control software for the trance vibrator (in Japanese) Category:Rhythm computer games

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