I'd like to actually be there and watch him play.
Let's face it.  How many of us can bowl over our sighted counterparts in a
game?  If the kids good, he's good!  No need to be jealous.


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Brandon Cole
Sent: Thursday, January 12, 2006 2:16 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: audyssey: Fw: Blind video game star prepares for Mortal
competition in Japan


Ridiculous. Absolutely positively ridiculous. Do you have any idea how many 
of us could get this same kind of publicity if we tried? I find this 
pathetic.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ryan Strunk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 8:26 PM
Subject: audyssey: Fw: Blind video game star prepares for Mortal competition

in Japan


> Ladies and Gentlemen,
>
> Please let me know your thoughts on this situation.
> The individual, in another article, is now styled as "the blind 
> gamer."
>
> Ryan
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Amy Buresh
> To: undisclosed recipients:
> Sent: Monday, January 09, 2006 9:29 AM
> Subject: Blind video game star prepares for Mortal competition in Japan
>
>
> This article from today's Lincoln Journal Star
>
> Blind video game star prepares for Mortal competition in Japan by 
> hilary kindschuh/Lincoln Journal Star
>
> The latest challenger stands up, defeated.
>
> LINCOLN, NE- 06 JAN 07 - Blind videogamer Brice Mellen plays a 
> practice
> game of Mortal Kombat before taking on anyone willing to challenge him at 
> DogTags
> Gaming Center on Sunday afternoon. Filming him was a crew from Nippon 
> Television in Japan, who is sponsoring Mellen's upcoming trip to Japan to 
> take on
> that country's best players. Jill Peitzmeier/jp Lincoln Journal Star
>
> "Next victim," says someone in the crowd.
>
> Another competitor trudges to the front of the room, sits in a black 
> chair
> facing a large television screen and picks up a video game controller.
>
> Everyone knows it's hopeless.
>
> During a special Mortal Kombat competition on Sunday at the DogTags 
> Gaming
> Center in northeast Lincoln, Brice Mellen effortlessly defeated one 
> opponent
> after another as he rocked in his chair, his back to the television 
> screen.
>
> Brice wasn't showing off by turning away from the video characters
> fighting on a platform under a rainy, overcast sky. He can't see them.
>
> Brice, 18, who has been blind since birth due to Leber's disease, 
> began
> attracting attention for his video gaming prowess last summer when he was 
> featured
> on several television programs, including NBC's Today Show.
>
> Later this month the Lincoln East High School senior and his father 
> will
> travel to Japan, where Brice will compete with some of Japan's best Mortal

> Kombat
> players as part of a special for Nippon TV's Power of Memory, Part III.
>
> A Japanese film crew from Nippon TV came to Lincoln over the weekend 
> to
> shoot footage of Brice at his home and at the gaming center.
>
> Sunday's special competition at DogTags was designed as a warmup to 
> help
> Brice prepare for the tournament.
>
> Brice trumped all challengers in best of three rounds competition - 
> most
> were defeated in under three minutes. A couple managed to win their first 
> round
> but Brice always came back to win rounds two and three.
>
> Brice's sister, 19-year-old Sharon Mellen, said they started playing 
> Mario
> Brothers video games with their step-sisters about 10 years ago.
>
> "We went through a lot of controllers," Sharon said.
>
> Eventually, Brice moved on to a Sega Genesis, Sharon said. That's when 
> he
> started playing Mortal Kombat.
>
> "Then it was love thereafter," she said.
>
> Brice's family didn't realize how talented he was until he came to the
> DogTags, Sharon said.
>
> "Kids don't want to play him," she said. "They're scared to lose."
>
> By listening to the different sounds in the game, Brice said, he can
> anticipate what his opponent will do.
>
> "But you've got to attack, too," he said.
>
> After Brice defeated all of his challengers Sunday,  a member of the
> Japanese film crew asked him if he was confident he would always win.
>
> "Who knows? There could be somebody out there better than me," Brice 
> said,
> rocking in his chair. "That's why I've got to keep playing, so I can win 
> if we
> ever meet."
>
> Reach Hilary Kindschuh at 473-7301 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> to leave send a blank Email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -- 
> No virus found in this incoming message.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.14.17/227 - Release Date: 1/11/2006
>
> 



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