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The Top 10 Gaming Colleges 66

Pluvius writes "The top-ten list of party schools published by the Princeton Review every year has always been a popular metric among prospective American college students for determining the 'most compatible' university to attend. Because of this, the Global Gaming League has come up with a more geek-oriented list: The First Annual Top Gaming Colleges Survey. The entries were selected based on such factors as proximity to gamer meccas such as Southern California, the frequency of LAN parties, and the existence and strength of a game design curriculum. Here's an excerpt from the number one entry, UT/Austin: 'Last, if you don't feel like leaving your dorm, there's nothing to worry about. A blistering Internet connection will give you LAN pings inside Texas, 30 milliseconds of latency to the East coast and 40 to the West coast. "The Internet connection at the dorms is ****ing amazing. I was [on it] freshman year; I miss that part about moving out of the dorms."'"
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The Top 10 Gaming Colleges

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  • Re:Uh yeah. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by iced_773 ( 857608 ) on Thursday August 31, 2006 @11:39AM (#16016213)
    I go to UVA. I have plenty of time to game, but there's so much fun stuff going on in the real world that I don't want to game. WoW may be great and everything, but in the end, you will have a much better time at a real party school than at a LAN party school.
  • by kannibal_klown ( 531544 ) on Thursday August 31, 2006 @11:44AM (#16016254)
    When I was in college, we had a very nice tub... pipe to the Internet :) Back in 98-99 I believe we leased part of a T3.

    What stunk is we were blocked from playing games on the Internet. This was back during Half-Life, Unreal Tournament, Counter Strike, Quake III, days. They blocked ports, UDP, you name it. It really stunk.

    The LAN Gaming was great, particularly since you often knew the person you were playing against so I didn't mind THAT much. However, after I moved offcampus my senior year I found out that they took things a step further. They started blocking traffic between each dorm, meaning you could only play against people in your own dorm. When I asked what their reasons were, my friends just shrugged.

    I don't know what the state of affairs is there now, for all I know they've opened up Internet gaming again. But it was a shame that a school ranked so highly for "being wired" that they took such steps. I know, I know... I wasn't going there to play games. But I did pretty well in school (later got my Masters) so it's not like I was a complete slacker.
  • Uh yeah-Placeholders (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 31, 2006 @11:57AM (#16016365)
    Well let's see. Between school itself (and the associated homework)*, plus the job you'll need to pay for it all. Were does one find the time to game?

    *And let's mention the fact that the student population is getting older and have family responsabilities.
  • by ibmman85 ( 643041 ) on Thursday August 31, 2006 @12:01PM (#16016397) Homepage
    Actually RIT is great for general geekery. For a while though we nearly had 2 different groups almost competing for who could hold the best campus LAN. One of them ended up having a LAN party about every 2 weeks for most of the year, giving out insane prizes, until it ran their budget into the ground. So now electronic gaming society only has LANs once in a while, and we have RITfest twice a year which has been consistently pretty big and usually pretty fun. EGS still meets once a week (with an occasional special event or tournament) for console gaming. And then of course theres RWAG for D&D and tabletop... and we have a Go club, and Anime club is actually the largest club on campus. And we have an OC3 (although thats for the whole school). So yeah, yay for geeks and gamers!

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