Posts Tagged ‘deaf’

Mockup of Heavy Rain with Full Closed Captioning

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

Information

Mockup of Heavy Rain with full closed captioning. from Reid Kimball on Vimeo.

I found a video someone recorded of them playing Heavy Rain. I downloaded it and brought it into Vegas Movie Studio HD Platinum 10 and added text overlays for all of the closed captions. I then tweaked font colors, fades, timing and positioning.

I am a hard of hearing video game designer. In 2004, my team and I released Doom 3[CC], a mod for id Software’s Doom 3 that added full closed captioning.

My goal is to work with other game developers to help them implement full closed captioning that enhances the accessibility of their games to reach a broader audience.

Please notice:

1. The text is larger, therefore easier to see. Many video games that have subtitles (dialog only, no sound effects) use very small text that is hard to read on SD TVs, which I have.

2. Text uses a bright color with a black outline. This ensures it is readable on many different backgrounds. Bright yellow is not a common color used the environment of video games, while bright white is more likely.

3. Limited stacking of multiple lines (2 max shown) leaves the rest of the screen uncluttered.

Depending on the game, closed captioning can merely increase the awareness of game atmosphere for the hard of hearing and deaf or it can provide essential feedback they miss out that comes from the audio. As an example, in Doom 3[CC], closed captions help deaf players know enemies are approaching or attacking off screen when they can’t be heard. In Heavy Rain, the player can walk up to an apartment door and hear a woman inside screaming as she is attacked. However, these screams are not captioned and hard of hearing or deaf players are likely to miss out on a key sequence of gameplay.

Let me know if you’d like to talk with me about figuring out closed captioning solutions for your game.

© 2010, Reid Bryant Kimball. All rights reserved.

Article on Closed Captioning for Games

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

Quick update, Robert Ashley interviewed me a couple weeks ago for an article he wrote in The Escapist about closed captioning for video games called The Silent Majority. I hope we aren’t so silent anymore!

© 2008, Reid Bryant Kimball. All rights reserved.