Curt Schilling dishes on his upcoming MMO game | PC News
| Hugging Harold Reynolds found this 7/11/2008 on www.gamepro.com [flag] |
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Schilling Wants Gamers to Bludgeon Foes with Bloody Sock
Published 7/11/2008 by noreply@blogger.com (Hugging Harold Reynolds) at Hugging Harold Reynolds
GamePro.com reports that that Curt Schilling's game development company 38 Studios is developing a Massive Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game (MMORPG) titled "Copernicus." In the latest episode of the Jace Hall Show, Schilling "talked briefly about his new game development company, 38 studios...Though details are scarce...the most powerful weapon in the game is rumored to be a bloody sock (for real), a reference to the 2004 ALCS in which Schilling pitched in a bloody sock due to leaky sutures on his ankle." Copernicus is the father of ...
This Is The Most Powerful Weapon of All
Published 7/14/2008 by Chimpanzee Rage (noreply@blogger.com) at Deuce of Davenport | Sports News, Commentary, Humor, Videos
... This is Curt Schilling's bloody sock from Game 2 of the 2004 World Series and it is the most powerful weapon in the universe...in Curt Schilling's video game world he is creating. We've all known for awhile that Schilling has been busy working with his company 38 studios (formerly Green Monster Games) on a new MMORPG that was supposed to be like the Everquest world that ...
The bloody sock's magic knows no bounds
Published 7/17/2008 by Dan Lamothe, Red Sox Monster at Red Sox Monster - MassLive.com
... to me last week, but Schilling is now taking the Sock Mystique to a whole new level, using it as "the most powerful weapon" in a new online game his 38 Studios company is developing. From GamePro.com : Though details are scarce, the title will be called Copernicus, and the most powerful weapon in the game is rumored to be a bloody sock (for real), a reference to the 2004 ALCS in which Schilling pitched in a bloody sock due to leaky sutures on his ankle. When asked by Hall about the challenges in making an MMO game, Schilling replied in rhetorical fashion: "Why the hell didn't ...

