I got StreetPassed on the turnpike and I liked it

Funny-pictures-interesting-cat
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Jay Henningsen

Joshua's story has all the hallmarks of an interesting read: video games, humor, and chance encounters with strange men on lonely, rural roads.

3DS WheelLiving in rural Ohio affords me certain opportunities others don’t get to enjoy. For example, few know the simple pleasure of completely understanding the following analogy: “Like a cow pissing on a flat rock.”

Being in such a decidedly non-urban environment, I need to rely on highways and interstates for a great deal of my travel. From time to time, I am also blessed with the privilege of paying to drive on a road with an extra lane in it.

Yes, the turnpike. As a child it represented a thing of great evil, for in a time before GameBoys, the mere mention of it threw my brother and me into biologically confusing fits of anticipatory ennui (and on one occasion a particularly nasty preemptive leg cramp).

As an adult, the turnpike merely turned into a forgone necessity. Until last Thursday that is, when the turnpike became much more -- and Eddie showed me the wonders of the open road.

Whoa, whoa ... dude. Is this going to get all "Lifetime Special’"on us? Is Eddie a bad man?

 

No, no, no. I mean, he might be. I don’t know. But if you’re good at reading between the lines or are particularly gifted with headline comprehension, you’ve now pieced together that Eddie is merely the individual on the turnpike with whom I had my first StreetPass with my Nintendo 3DS.

I feel compelled to repeat that this occurred on the turnpike. I ... I don’t mean that I passed a person at a rest stop who was packing a 3DS, and I don’t mean there was a kid with one in the back seat of a car paying its toll. I mean I got a StreetPass, driving at 65mph (and no more), passing a semi, which was also ... driving.


Words cannot describe my surprise. If my bi-annual trips into "The Big City" had yet to yield any Pass action, what hope would I have of ever getting one?! But here, in the early morning nothing of the turnpike, my little green light started to blink.

I pulled over immediately and opened my 3DS, and that’s when I met Eddie. In my plaza, a smiling, mustachioed Mii wearing a red knit cap said, “What’s up?” and proudly stated that he was currently playing Super Mario 3D Land, which I was also currently playing (though, not while driving).

It’s difficult to describe the particular brand of kinship shared by two complete strangers playing the same game, who had undoubtedly surprised each other with a random StreetPass on a road of all places. It’s like walking past a house at night and seeing a family watching Goonies, because you’ve instantly confirmed their good taste in movies and suddenly have this amazing thing in common with them -- though only through a selfish act of voyeurism.

The figurative din of constant “pokes” and “pushes” in social media can be louder than the snoring at a John Tesh concert. But the Nintendo 3DS finesses these notifications into the StreetPass experience, seemingly proving to those who use it that it’s definitely better to engage your audience than enrage it.

In a brief instance, without words, Eddie and I had stumbled onto that elusive common denominator so desperately sought when you meet someone you don’t know. There was no fumbling around with talk about the weather or how we like our steak, or how he wished Ross Perot would make a comeback. There was just a love of games -- just how I like it. 

 
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Comments (8)
Default_picture
February 28, 2012

Nice piece. I've yet to encounter a single street pass, and I live in NYC. Maybe I should take my 3DS outdoors sometime.

Dscn0568_-_copy
February 28, 2012

My friends have 3DSs and also have trouble finding people. It works better if you go to a comic convention where a lot of people have the system.

37893_1338936035999_1309080061_30825631_6290042_n
February 29, 2012

As a fellow midwesterner, I feel your pain. While walking to class every day at a college campus affords me a rare Street Pass every now and then, I don't much get to use the feature and all that comes with it.

Street Pass is designed and tailored for the Japanese market, thriving in its high population density, but for most of the U.S., we're just not conducive to the magic of Street Pass.

Chris is right: conventions are where to go if you're looking for passes (something I hope to experience first hand at this year's PAX East,) but for now, we'll just have to take the small victories where we can get them Josh. Cool story. 

Funny-pictures-interesting-cat
February 29, 2012

Akron had a "Pixel Festival" awhile ago, and I couldn't even score a StreetPass there!

Default_picture
February 29, 2012

Lol. Your experience reminded me of all the times I toted my DS around with The World Ends With You. I earned quite a few extra pins by leaving the wireless communications on. Haha.

It's too bad that this doesn't work effectively unless I actually pass through an anime or a video game convention. it's a pleasant feature though. I enjoy it whenever it works.

Default_picture
February 29, 2012

Every time I took my DS out to try and do street pass things, I was disappointed. Never a single hit except for when I setup two copies of the game on my two systems just to see how it worked.

With Near, only a couple of weeks after I got the system and I've already gotten 15 game goods from it, as well as a number of new people on my friends list. Almost every time it checks my location in, it shows me more than a dozen people checking in in the last week near that location. This is in a relatively small city (~100k people) out in the middle of nowhere... The highest count I've gotten so far was 53 people. Near is a streetpass system that might actually work in America, unlike Streetpass itself. 

If only they get something for it as good as DQ9's map sharing system, this'll be great.

Shoe_headshot_-_square
March 03, 2012

Just wanted to let you know that this is an awesome headline!

Funny-pictures-interesting-cat
March 03, 2012

Thank you kindly!

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