There’s a petition up to add a color-blind option to Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, which is an awesome game. For those not familiar with it, it uses red and green name tags (and icons) when playing multiplayer matches online: red for enemies and green for friendlies. Needless to say, this can pose a problem for players with red/green colorblindness.

I was actually very surprised when I didn’t find a color-blind option in MW2, when CoD: World at War had such an option. In WaW, it made the name tags blue/red, or maybe it was orange? Whatever it was, they were very distinctive colors, heh. I understand the developers are different (Infinity Ward did the two Modern Warfare CoD games while Treyarch has done the WW2 CoD games), but c’mon, color-blind options should be as commonplace in games as Y-axis inversion (which is to say, ubiquitous — don’t get me started on games that don’t include inversion options).

An estimated 8-10% of the male population has some form of color-blindness, and red/green is the most common. I’ve seen on the MW2 leaderboards that there are already over 5 million people ranked online. This means that over 400,000 gamers (read: customers) are potentially negatively affected by this issue.

If you want more thoughts on color-blindness, feel free to read my previous post about it: Color Me Blind. Otherwise, please hit this petition and help us out. Thanks!

EDIT: some less generous members of the community have made the observation that it may require some cost to implement color-blind options, and that cost is then borne by the rest of the community; ten percent is a minority, after all. My response to this is (a) 10% is still quite significant — what business wouldn’t say yes to a 10% boost in sales, for example? and (b) what really bugs me is that the red/green palette was chosen in the first place. This is, frankly, an antiquate color scheme. Red/green traffic lights. Red/green status lights and LEDs. Is it simply because blue LEDs are more expensive to manufacture? Or just laziness and lack of forward thinking on the part of manufacturers?

The bottom line: why do game developers continue to choose red/green colors at all? Why couldn’t this (and many other games) use red/blue or blue/green right from the start, for everyone? The only place I would expect to use red/green is in games that require many colors; I even use them myself sometimes in my boardgame designs. In these cases, though, I take care to vary the brightness of the colors so that is an additional cue, and of course the use of symbols/shapes can be used as an alternate cue. The XBLA game “Hexic” adds icons to the pieces when the color-blind option is enabled; Bejeweled uses different shaped gems. It’s not rocket science, people.

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Yeah, I’ve got a gimp wrist right now. Carpal tunnel or RSI or whatever… it’s my own fault. I’ve been writing a lot of documentation and reports the last couple weeks at work, plus I’ve been typing like a mad man on game design. It’s not just a matter of over-doing it, though, I think it’s also when I don’t sit properly and/or type with the laptop in an awkward position.

Now my wrist hurts quite a bit. I’m sitting with my forearms flat on the table so I don’t have my wrist at a funny angle (”It was at a funny angle!”), and I’ve been dosing up on ibuprofen and staying away from the Xbox. I just can’t stop working on game design, though. I might have to type one-handed for a while, or maybe switch to a notebook while working early stuff.

Ugh, so annoying.

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Yes, when I turned on my Xbox 360 on Wednesday night, I was greeted with no video and three flashing lights on the status ring – the dreaded Red Ring of Death. Fortunately, when I sent it in last time, they added on another year of coverage for the RROD, so it’s free to get repaired/refurbished/replaced again. On the plus side, it was very easy to go to the Xbox site, request a repair, and print off my own prepaid UPS shipping label. I still have lots of boxes and packing material from game trading and Ebay, so I dropped this thing off at the UPS Store yesterday. With any luck, I’ll have a functional box back again in 2-3 weeks (I’m not holding my breath to get it back in less than 10 days like my Dad did earlier this year).

I’m sure my CoD skills, such as they are, will atrophy completely by the time I get my box back. We also haven’t had a chance to play Nazi Zombies on the new map yet, either. Bummer.

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Well, our tax refunds went to paying off a credit card, but I got a bonus this year, which is yielding clothes (for everyone), a Wii + Wii Fit (D’s wishlist item) and a new TV for the bedroom (my wishlist item).

I’ve tried friends’ Wiis before and, while I thought they were neat, it wasn’t on my buy list. D has been wanting one for a while anyway, plus some friends are having success using Wii Fit, so that increased her desire. The Wii became a rider on my decision to purchase a new bedroom TV, so there it is, in the living room. On the plus side, I got Ryan to play tennis, bowling and boxing with me, which was a lot of fun, and D got a kick out of bowling, too. I hope I can get both of them to play on a regular basis.

The TV is the Samsung LN32A330, a 32″ 720p LCD HDTV with good reviews and, as important, on sale for $497 from Best Buy right now (regular price $599). I’m super happy with the Samsung DLP in the living room, so this should be a great purchase. Since I started writing this, they’ve restocked at BB and I brought one home. It does, indeed, look great. I’m actually really impressed with how good lo-def TV looks on it – it seems less… yucky? than it did on the DLP.

Also got an upconverting Samsung DVD player for the bedroom (I seem to have converted my household from a Sony shop to Samsung), currently plugged in with composite while I order an HDMI cable. Hm, and if I can find one, a component cable for the old Xbox.

Ugh, bye-bye bonus.

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