I'm having some initial thoughts about a piece of writing looking at cowboy simulation. Why would this be on my mind? Well, it's down to playing lots of the marvellous
Red Dead Redemption and wondering to myself why I like it so much. It started me thinking about other experiences of wild west simulation in my life, and then I remembered the film Westworld. I saw it when I was quite young - maybe 7? - and I clearly remember being completely terrified. Yule Brynner was just so scary as the unstoppable cowboy robot gone wrong. There was just
nothing that could kill him. There are moments in Red Dead, for example when you are in the Multiplayer modes, playing in real time online with other players and you see them 'beam in' to the game, Star Trek styley when I feel strong comparisons with
Westworld.
The other notable wild west simulation in my life relates to the town where I grew up, Weston-super-Mare. Weston pier as I knew it
burnt down in 2008, and with it, all the strange, scary and evocative attractions inside it. One of these was 'Zeke's Shack', a hillbilly themed shooting range, where animatronic straw-haired varmints would spit and shoot water at you. The aim was to shoot moving targets in their dusty broken down shack and yard in order to win points to spend in the prize booth. It always scared me and made me squirm but I was grimly fascinated by it, much like Westworld. The interesting twist in this is that it was destroyed in the fire, and I can't help but wonder what it all looked like when it burnt. As I've been writing this, I've just remembered that Yule Brynner's character in Westworld has his robotic face burnt off, but still keeps on going.......