Marija S.
441 reviews35 followers
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February 5, 2022Be warned if you are considering reading this book because of Kojima's game designer vocation. This is a collection of essays on personal impressions of books, movies, anime, etc. and does not discuss his creative process, gaming industry, work experiences, etc.
cheer
58 reviews16 followers
Hideo Kojima talks to you about his favorite works of art and goes surprisingly deep into his personal life and perception of reality in the process. This book is everything to me now. It reads so clearly as Hideo's voice—the way his bizarre extended metaphors and cheesy references can transition into a paragraph of the most profound philosophical thought I have ever heard is incredible. Kojima is a human being. This is the most personal he has been directly. But reading this book will make you realize just how truly personal every single fiber of the themes of his games truly are. Hideo Kojima has passed on his memes to me, and I will carry them with me wherever I may go. There's no need to feel alone anymore. "Elsewhere on this Earth, there are other people who share the same loneliness." –Hideo Kojima
- favorites owned
James Andrews
26 reviews1 follower
Hideo Kojima is, in my opinion, one of the great auteurs of our time. So, when I saw that he was releasing a book titled The Creative Gene, I had no choice but to instantly pre-order it. (This was probably my first pre-order of any sort of media since the PlayStation 2 era.) Despite my excitement, this book didn't quite meet my expectations. I mostly blame myself for these erroneous expectations, hobbled by the misleading marketing of the English version, which is subtitled "How books, movies, and music inspired the creator of Death Stranding and Metal Gear Solid." I think it's a stretch to say this book is about how these things inspired Kojima's work. The book is really a series of previously published essays, most of which focus on a specific novel or movie that influenced Kojima and contributed to his creative DNA. We do get occasional glimpses into how these works directly influenced Kojima's art, and those moments are some of the highlights of the book. (As an especially amusing example: The character of The Boss in Metal Gear Solid 3 is inspired by the matronly, eponymous cat from the novel Jennie by Paul Gallico.) But these small insights feel like tangential confessions as Kojima straightforwardly gushes about his favorite works of art. The book's original title in Japanese is The Gifted Gene and My Lovable Memes. To me, the "Lovable Memes" part more closely reflects the reality of the book (taking "meme" in the original definition as an idea or concept that spreads from person to person). It's Kojima unashamedly fanboying out on the "memes" that inspired and shaped his own art, even if he only occasionally explains how the influences materialized. At the very least, this is a great curation of book and movie recommendations. As a Kojima fan, it's a solid 4 stars -- especially if you go in without heightened expectations. The final two essays, plus the interview with Gen Hoshino, were my favorite part. That's where we get the most insight into his creative philosophy, and how he views collaboration, inspiration, and human connection as essential parts of the creative process. As he points out, a "meme" = "Me + Me".
Artù
167 reviews3 followers
Era l’anno 1986. Avevo tre anni. Mi venne regalato un Atari, una scatola nera dal design semplice, che aveva il potere di collegarsi ad una tv e di permetterti di giocare a casa ai videogames.
Fu una folgorazione, quei pochi pixel su schermo in movimento sollecitavano la mia fantasia. Ero un avventuriero nella giungla, una navicella spaziale, un pilota di formula uno, un pugile, un tennista e molto molto altro. Bastava cambiare cartuccia per una nuova esperienza.
Oggi i videogames sono molto cambiati. È un industria florida con introiti ed investimenti superiore al mondo del cinema. Sono diventato più critico nei loro confronti ed i libri sono diventati il mio intrattenimento primario, nonostante tutto continuo a seguire quel mondo, le ultime novità, preferendo giochi dalla grafica colorata a quelli ultra realistici.
Hideo Kojima, è un famoso game designer. Celebre per la sua saga Metal Gear Solid e per il recente Death Stranding. Kojima in questa libro ci parla dei suoi interessi e spiega cosa sia per lui un “meme”. Un “meme” secondo il game designer è un gene culturale che si trasmette di persona in persona e che sopravvive al tempo se viene tramandato ed attecchisce. Questo avviene grazie alla peculiarità dell’uomo di raccontarsi storie attraverso la parola, orale e scritta, attraverso il cinema, la musica e l’arte.
Nel libro Kojima ci parla delle opere che hanno influenzato la sua vita, ossia dei suoi personali “meme”, la lettura è molto piacevole e pagina dopo pagina, vengono fuori anche aspetti della vita dell’autore. Kojima è una grande amante di cinema, musica e libri in particolare Gialli, Mistery, Fantascienza, Sci-fi e generi affini.
In questo libro si parla dei Joy Division, di 2001 Odissea nello Spazio, di Blade Runner e di numerosi manga pop Giapponesi. Un buon libro a dimostrare come un lavoro creativo quale quello di game designer sia anche un lavoro culturale e di ricerca.
alexis
249 reviews52 followers
A must read for anyone who played Death Stranding and spent the entire time thinking about the overlapping themes and role of women in comparison to the metal gear solid series but was still part of the venn diagram who was charmed by the extreme un-subtlety of names like “Die-Hardman” and screamed out loud when they revealed his birth name twenty minutes before the end of the game.
Arkan Thales
27 reviews
Found out that me and the man himself have so much in common when it comes to experiencing art that is literally insane.
Steve
183 reviews2 followers
An important piece of advice that I’ve begun to really follow more and more as I’ve grown older is that one should never meet their idols. At the very best case scenario, you’ll find they’re a great person, they’ve shared their time with you, and they will really honor your value as a person who has invested their own time in that idol’s career. What a rush. On the other end of the spectrum, you’ll find this person is disconnected from the world, isolated within their own ego, is drunk or addled, is crude, rude, dismissive, the list goes on. But somewhere in between, somewhere in the space of humility, we will find that our idols are deeply human, just like us. The glow simmers into a tone, the praise just becomes rumor. We find that the people we have created all of these silent myths in our mind about are only straw cities waiting on an ember of reality to raze it from ground to sky. They just become us, they become the people that we could have been, the people that we could still be. And on some level, that’s deeply inspiring. But on another, in my mind, I think we need these proto-human idols. We need larger than life figures who we believe have ‘powers’ beyond our own, who have seen through the algorithm of the human element and are able to squeeze through the cracks of contemporary progress, instead elevating, escalating and innovating in ways that are simply not within our DNA’s vocabulary. In Kojima’s book, I do believe that this is the closest I will ever come to meeting him. A couple of years ago I made a list in a notebook of all of the people who I see as creative heroes, people whose vision was one that still reached out of some split in time and space and snatched ideas that I could never have culminated, even in years of silent thought and creation. Their abstract concepts are so unique and so courageous that I absolutely adore not only the fictions that stir from them, but also the fact that the brain that created them resides within these people. It feels like a cosmic reactor frenzying at all times, at all moments, and all that needs to happen is for them to feel inspired and to grab an idea and their dedication, their skill, and their talent will amass to construct all the ductwork, the magnificence, the blueprints, the energy and they will stand beside their creation momentarily, only stepping away next to create something else new. Now, I get that even our most genius creative minds don’t operate like that, and I know that’s a bit of a fairy tale way to look at things, but I know that these people have the potential to be this kind of creator. Hideo Kojima was (and will always be) on that list. The creator of the sprawling and mind-dissecting opus of Metal Gear Solid and the high-concept world uniter Death Stranding among other titles, the way this man writes stories and narratives and characters is unlike anyone else I have ever seen. The way he shares on social media from an optimistic creative standpoint and shines light on some of his contemporaries, the way he shares the music that makes him want to create certain games or scenes, the way he will show off new additions to his film library, all of these little things really personally inspire me to always fuel the machine, to always reach out and find new units with which to spark fire inside the mind. He has always had a sort of naivety about him in the way he communicates, a sort of child-like awe and go-get-em attitude that I also am impressed by as someone who has been run through the game industry’s ringer, but also as someone who has had so many eyes on him from so many directions. He just seems to “Get it” and he seems to always be working on something new, and if not, he is “fueling the machine” to make more. To find the next spark. Initially, reading this book dimmed some of the shine of what I believed this man to be. The language he uses in this book is very basic, very straightforward. There is no flourish and there is a kindly passion bared on the page that feels very shallow. Nearly one-dimensional. It’s a sense of naivety through to the point of a hint of adolescence and simplicity. He is talking about films, books, albums he has loved. I love that! However, we rarely get to see these pieces of media as ones that have made him look at his own work, past and present, in different ways, works that have resonated deeply within him for ideas he may use in the future. Reading this book, I am led often to wonder about the way we recommend or claim things. I will speak from personal experience, but the arc of my consumption and the shapes of banners I waved began low at its base, claiming things that were initially relatable, excitable, easy to identify with. I liked to recommend things that I knew would sink in instantly and easily. At my absolute summit, I strived to find the most niche and abstract films, books, bands, albums to hand off to friends. My imagination ran wild with the sense of blind ambition this would inspire in others, to have a seed planted in their mind and heart that something like this could exist, something that was difficult to find, something that was obscured from all normal vision. I thought it would spread like a viral contagion, the passion and longing for new things that existed below the surface, if only they too could take that one extra step to discover a new director or a new record label. It isn’t until now that I am getting to the stage that I believe Kojima is at while writing this book, that regardless of how he found these books, these films, no matter if these things are standing in a spotlight in front of the eyes of billions or something he found as a one-of-a-kind artifact, he just wants to share his joy about it. That’s the type of language I’m finding within this book: joyous. His excitement for each unit is bright and tangible. In my own sharing of different media, mainly music, I have often said that when I send out a playlist or hand out a mixtape, the ultimate goal is for someone to find just one song or band that they’re going to keep with them, and sort of remember the process of how they found it and hope to do the same in their life going forward (with anything, not just music). I think Kojima is accomplishing this, doing almost exactly what I tend to do with these bi-annual releases I make. He’s sharing the stuff he loves and giving personal connection to why he wants others to check it out. Am I reading this book for a new upgrade of how I understand the language, to be swooned by incredible turn-of-phrase? No. No way. I read this book to see the types of fuel that this powerhouse creative feeds his machinery with. And this book delivers. I do love this aspect of that. Especially because this book is a collection of older essays that he’s written in the past. I think the most misleading thing about this book is that I assumed (something I take full accountability for) that this book would feel a little bit more like a course in how to siphon that fuel and turn it outward into something of your own design. I had visions of reading how he took these books, these films, these records, and how he channeled it into specific elements of his own games, how different lines in a novel changed the way he wrote a MGS scene. How he constructed an entire 8 hour portion of Death Stranding around a single time he heard a Chvrches song. This is not that book. So for that reason, I do feel a bit disappointed. The title itself and the subtitle I think are absolute misnomers. I don’t believe we discuss any Creative Gene, whether it be genetic or memetic, nor do we discover how these movies, books or music inspired the creator. We learn what he likes. We learn that he is inspired by them. And that’s fine! But we definitively do not learn how these inspire him. The core tenet of this book, though, is one that I think is one that I believe is crucial for fans of any media to learn. I think it was attempted to be instilled in us during high school english classes, and truly an art form of its own that gets a lot more time in college courses. That is the idea of thinking critically and abstractly about media on its own. Some may argue that thinking about what art is takes away from what art does (or vice versa), but I don’t think I have enjoyed music, film or literature quite as much as I have when I have two or three parallel lines or analogues being built alongside it while I’m experiencing it. This book does a wonderful job of giving early insight on how to understand why we consume the media that we do. How it creates landmarks across our life of not only how the plots of books, how the sound of songs or how the scenes in movies exist as memories in their current form, but also who we were before and after we experienced them, the way that those moments shaped our lives coming out of them and the way that they changed the way we think about all things that occurred before and after them. Kojima’s kind and direct language is an enjoyable beginner’s course for how to do this. In fact, I know that while I’m reading this book, I’m thinking and wondering what my book of this very nature would be as well and I’m sure plenty of others have had similar thoughts. I don’t recommend this book unless you really love Kojima and can’t get enough of his content. I came away from it with a couple of books added to the Want to Read list and a few movies in the queue, but nothing that changed how I saw creativity or creation, nor was it able to change the way I felt about existing media or a fresh take on anything that I wanted to watch or listen to. There was no hidden gem within, no shining nugget at the core of the experience.
And in some ways, I’m a little crestfallen.
Stevens
22 reviews3 followers
Unfortunately found this book to be quite disappointing… I was recommended and lent this by my game dev colleagues. Admittedly, I’ve never played MGS or Death Stranding, but as a Level Designer in the industry, it’s impossible to not have heard of Kojima and his works that have earned him his world-renowned status. That status is what got me excited to read this book. I wanted to delve deep into the mind of Kojima, his principles, direction, concepts, approach to new mechanics, ability to connect with players, exercises in generating new ideas etc. I wanted my own design mentality and creative process to be challenged so that I can improve, but what I unexpectedly got instead was a collection of (in most cases, massively outdated) book, movie and music reviews. You could argue that’s what I should’ve expected from the title, but Kojima only really mentions MGS and Death Stranding a handful of times, and barely ever actually highlights direct influences. There’s a few sections where it feels like it’s on track, and then it suddenly diverts away again. Ultimately, I think your enjoyment of this book depends on whether or not you’re an existing fan of Kojima and/or his works - I’d have found it much more interesting, for example, had it have been a Joe Staten or Jason Jones writing about inspirations for the Halo universe purely because it’s a franchise I’m more familiar with and inspired by. Kojima, I think it’s time to make a Goodreads account mate.
Connor Foley
177 reviews8 followers
3.5* Interesting way to compile a semi-autobiography by connecting the media you were exposed to to the shifts of thinking or milestone moments of one’s life. Very relatable as one who can categorize periods of their life by the movies, music or books I obsessed over
Yaroslav
5 reviews9 followers
Эта книга - сборник размышлений Кодзимы о различных фильмах, книгах, аниме, музыке, которые в свое время повлияли на него, оставили след в душе - и теперь он делится впечатлениями и объясняет, почему эти мемы стоят внимания. Мемы - это термин, который постоянно упоминается в книге тут и там. Имеется в виду информация, которая передается от человека к человеку. Разумеется, эти мемы могут по-всякому сочетаться, соединяться, "прорастать" в разные идеи. Конечно, в ходе прочтения хочется взять некоторые вещи на заметку. В книжке есть и некоторые подробности биографии Хидео: он вспоминает детство, учебу в университете, отдельные моменты профессиональной карьеры. Порой в этих воспоминаниях повторяется, но они все равно интересны и достаточно откровенны. Дают лучше понять Кодзиму, объясняют его идеи и мотивации.
Sophia
62 reviews4 followers
Bin sehr froh, dass nur die ca. erste Hälfte um Bücher geht. Nach den ersten 70 Seiten hatte ich schon 6 neue Bücher auf meiner tbr... Danach ging es noch um Bücher, Bands und sonstige kulturelle Themen wie die Erfindung des Walkmans.
Arjen
212 reviews13 followers
This book is a collection of "memes" (essentially ideas you pass onto someone else, not the funny ones about cats that bonk their owners) that inspired Hideo Kojima to create his famous works (mainly Metal Gear Solid). For the most part I've read, listened and watch everything mentioned in the book. For TV series I've mostly stuck with the pilot and a few additional episodes and not the entire series. Here's a quick overview what I thought about it. Novels: James P. Hogan - Inherit the Stars: 4/5 Dennis Lehane - Darkness, Take My Hand: 5/5 Paul Galicco - Jennie: 3/5 Teru Miyamoto - Kinshu: Autumn Brocade: 4/5 Kobo Abe - Woman in the Dunes: 5/5 Robert B. Parker - Early Autumn: 4/5 Agatha Christie - And Then There Were None: 4/5 Atsushi Nakajima - The Moon over the Mountain: DNF Hiro Ariokawa - Hankyu Railway: No English translation Minato Shuwaka - Orgel: No English translation Don Winslow - Satori: 3/5 Ryu Murakami - Coin Locker Babies: 4/5 Sakyo Komatsu - Virus: The Day of Resurrection: 4/5 Akira Yoshimura - Castaway: No English translation Stephen King - 'Salem's Lot: 3/5 Walter Wick - I Spy (series): Didn't read (children's book) Ryo Asai - The Voices of the Hoshiyadori Café: No English translation Hiroko Minagawa - The Resurrection Fireplace: 5/5 Ágota Kristóf - The Notebook, The Proof, The Third Lie: 5/5 Baku Yumemakura - The Summit of the Gods: No English translation, read a bit of the manga, 2/5 China Miéville - The City & The City: 3/5 Miyuki Miyabe - All She Was Worth: 3/5 Lucien Nahum - Shadow 81: Extremely expensive book, didn't read Project Itoh - Metal Gear Solid: Guns of the Patriots: 5/5 Manga: Kame Rider 1971: 2/5 The Drifting Classroom: 3/5 Umimachi Diary: 3/5 Tout Seul (Alone): 5/5 2001 Nights: 3/5 President Kosaku Shima: 3/5 Movies: Elevator to the Gallows: 6/10 North Face: 7/10 Taxi Driver: 6/10 Blade Runner: 6/10 2001: A Space Odyssey: 7/10 TV: Space Battleship Yamato: 6/10 (watched both old and new series) Columbo: Publish or Perish: 6/10 Sunday Foreign Movie Theatre 40th Anniversary: Nagaharu Yodogawa’s Classic Film Comments: No English translation Bewitched: 5/10 Little House on the Prairie: 6/10 Shin Chan: 8/10 Ultraseven: 4/10 The Genius Bakabon: 6/10 (no English translation for old series, so only watched new series) Music: Joy Division: 6/10
- kojima
DJ_Keyser
141 reviews1 follower
Across a variety of artistic mediums, there are a few people I uphold as personal heroes with the upmost of reverence. Aphex Twin, Nicolas Winding Refn and Alan Moore are a few, but Hideo Kojima has also retained this status ever since I first played Metal Gear Solid upon release. The Creative Gene is a collection of personal essays detailing the formative works and themes of Kojima’s life. Folk that aren’t Kojima die-hards may not be as enamoured as I by the content, but if you’re searching for insight into the inputs and influences that shaped him, you can go no further than this.
Diletta
Author9 books237 followers
Recensioni carine e umili vs picchi di "sono il miglior game designer di sempre".
Carino.
Mattie
4 reviews
My first book of 2022, The Creative Gene by Hideo Kojima! And like Kojima with "BlaRun", I've held my own little Festival with his works 😁 I have discovered an amazing amount of media through this book, I've learned about the love of being an astronaut, Ludens seems so familiar, the love and escape music and books provide, like Joy Division done for him, Kamen Rider and passing the torch to Taxi Driver rescuing him. As an avid fan of Kojima, he's not just the Metal Gear or Death Stranding guy, he's someone I eagerly look to for recommendations on books, movies and music as well! Death Stranding to me is what the Yamato movie was to him at that time, a bridged understanding, a connection of many! Thank you for sharing your thoughts and memes Kojima-San!
This books gives a brilliant insight to the creative approach, what has shaped and inspired Kojima, what has rescued him, what makes him so relatable and how I just want to bump into him in a bookstore and talk media, books, music and all the good things!
You will most certainly notice some quirks of his if you have played or followed his work, I've always followed Kojima's media posts, from music to movies and books and this has been a adventure!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
- mattie-s-favourites
Jozua
60 reviews7 followers
This guy has made some of my absolute favorite games I have ever played! It was a privilege to read through the life experiences of Hideo Kojima summed up in reviews about books/movies/mangas/music that have had an impact on his life. The influences on his games were (again for me) very clear to see and made me love them even more as an art form. So expect a book written as a review per chapter with some minor spoilers to explain how he learned to live/love/think.
Every review explains what he felt/learned when he encountered that book/.../... which makes this a (for me) unique look into a person's life.
A philosophical walk through his experiences!
Nicolò Grasso
160 reviews4 followers
A collection of articles and essays that Kojima wrote in the late 2000s and early 2010s on his favorite books, music, and films. It's very simplistic and often banal, with occasional moments of insight into his mind and creative input. It reads like hearing a friend talk about what he likes, and not in a good way.
Enrico Andreuccetti
25 reviews3 followers
Da ottimi spunti sia per capire un po’ meglio Kojima che per scoprire libri o spunti che magari ancora non si erano ancora incrociati. Buon libro. C’è poco da ricordare, ma è sicuramente da rileggere a piacimento.
Jay Slayton-Joslin
Author9 books19 followers
I love Kojima and it was great to see into his personal life but this book wasn't it. More like reading some personal goodreads reviews and accompanying essays.
Christopher
45 reviews
This was a super fun read. Metal Gear Solid is my favorite game franchise of all time and I was super excited to dig into this book. The Creative Gene is a collection of essays published by Hideo Kojima at different points in his career. Each essay was written within the last 20 some-odd years. It was a bit different from what I expected. Mostly each essay explores the particularly inspirational books, movies, and television productions Kojima was influenced by. I enjoyed the second half of this book much more than the first. It felt as though there was a loose chronological order on the second half of his essays. Two such examples are as follows: he discusses his relationship with his father and compliments it by talking about how instrumental Space Battleship Yamato was for him during his formative years. Here he draws a comparison between the way the 1970’s animation glorified honor and a premise called “roman.” Which his father’s generation revered. He then talks about how a slice-of-life manga outlining a salaryman’s career connected to him during his early years in management at Konami. The overarching theme of The Creative Gene is that connection through storytelling is extremely powerful as it relates to the human condition. I think part of what’s made Kojima so successful is his unbridled creativity and weirdness. Some of the stuff he was “allowed” to do in the Metal Gear Solid series was unfathomable and miraculous. It speaks volumes to his team that nowhere in the production pipeline did someone stop him and say “hey, maybe we don’t need to have this boss only be beatable by making the player plug their controller into the ‘player 2’ controller slot.” Or “maybe it’s not a good idea to have this cryptic radio frequency hidden in the game manual.” From what I understand, that corporate “weird resistance” is what led Kojima to eventually leave Konami. His departure culminated in Konami’s bastardization of the Metal Gear IP by releasing the most generic, run-of-the-mill, watered-down, vanilla bean frappe of a zombie/Metal Gear fusion game titled “Metal Gear: Survive.” *groans* It’s funny because in this book, Kojima says he’s not a big Stephen King fan. But they remind me so much of each other. That weirdness is what makes each great. And I think with both of them, the more chef’s they have stirring their pot, the more watered down and uninteresting their content becomes. ALSO, this book is setup exactly as Stephen King’s Danse Macabre is setup. The former outlining Kojima’s influences, the latter outlining King’s.
Rebeca F.
Author6 books15 followers
Nunca he sido fan de Kojima, de hecho, siempre he tenido cierto perjuicio hacia su persona debido a su actitud versus la de otros autores en la industria de los videojuegos que me encantan, como Taro o Miyazaki, sin embargo su aporte resulta innegable y las ideas, sobre todo detrás de Death Stranding, me resultan muy interesantes, por lo que al encontrarme con este texto en la librería decidí comprarlo sin saber mucho de qué iba.
Y la verdad es que mis prejuicios desaparecieron y mi imagen del cerebro tras MGS cambió completamente. Pese a ello, el libro puede resultar decepcionante para aquellos que buscan aprender más sobre su proceso creativo o incluso leer en profundidad sobre sus influencias, pues es básicamente un compendio de reseñas sobre películas, libros, mangas, música, etc. que lo han influido a través de su vida, relacionando estos productos culturales con sus experiencias y usándolos de base para reflexionar sobre diversos temas como la identidad nipona, la soledad, la familia, las expectativas sociales, etc.
Resulta bastante interesante, pero los textos son muy breves, por ende sólo alcanzan a tratar los temas por encima.
ms1v
24 reviews1 follower
I expected this to be more of a memoir when I first started reading it, but it's not. It's a collection of previously published essays serialized in Da Vinci and Papyrus magazines, available for the first time in English. I was still blown away. I wish I could've read this years ago when they were first written. The insights Kojima gives to his creative process and viewpoint of the world is intensely interesting, and my only gripe is that I wish there was more contemporary material. A must read for anyone who enjoys Kojima's works.
Ryleigh Dorman
21 reviews1 follower
Kojima speaks about the works that influenced him with such a contagious admiration. He is a creator first, but an audience second, held at the whim of the artists whose light touches changed his creative pathways. Every summary bleeds with an adorable level of reverence for these sometimes esoteric pieces (at least to an American). I would love to see a more detailed autobiography from Kojima, but learning about his life through his favorite media was a clever way to explore himself.
Javier
8 reviews
Me parece increíble como con una bibliografía de recomendaciones, se convierte en una de las biografías más íntimas que he leído de nadie. Gracias a este libro no solo te llevas un puñado de buenas recomendaciones si no que entiendes los hilos y memes que conforman el mundo de Kojima, como los asocia con la pérdida de su padre, con su soledad y su camino y visión de autor. No esperaba nada tan profundo he quedado ciertamente sorprendido.
Stefano
16 reviews1 follower
Probabilmente mi aspettavo qualcosa di più da quel “gene del talento”: in questo libro sono raccolti articoli dedicati a film, fumetti e romanzi che hanno formato/forgiato vita, opere e pensieri di Hideo Kojima che gettano sì una luce abbastanza interessante sulla persona e sul director, ma nulla di più, senza dare qualcosa di davvero memorabile (tra le due parti, molto più interessante la seconda, comunque). Come scritto inizialmente, probabilmente sono io che mi aspettavo qualcosa di diverso, alla fine è più un libro sulla connessione tramite opere (è dunque uno spin off di Death Stranding? Forse).
Hector Reyes
12 reviews4 followers
While I haven't loved every single Kojima game I have played, I have always had an immense respect for him. This book was a deep ride into his thinking and his inspirations and it definitely gave me both a better understanding of some of his decision making and an even greater respect for his talents and efforts as a creator. A nice bonus alongside the trip into Kojima's thinking is the long list of film and literature recommendations you'll walk away with.
Justine Cucchi-Dietlin
355 reviews23 followers
When I first played Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance, I thought the quote about memes was ironic. I had no idea Kojima had seriously read, understood, and incorporated Richard Dawkins's memetic theory into a videogame about a cyborg ninja. Well played, Kojima. Well played.
Nirvana X
150 reviews9 followers
this is like god himself reciting the bible to you. finishing it is probably the closest one can come to the whole krishna-adlibbing-the-gita-to-arjun feeling
- as-best-os
Jesús
105 reviews1 follower
(3.4) Got a lot of fun new books, graphic novels and music to listen to!
Andrew
3 reviews
A compilation of dank memes