A common criticism of single-player video games is that they isolate their players, shutting them off from anything or anyone that exists in the real world. Well, that certainly can’t be said of the lab-based ‘biotic games’ created by Stanford University physicist Ingmar Riedel-Kruse – while they may be fashioned after arcade classics, his games require players to manipulate living microorganisms in real time. If you want to ‘kick’ a soccer ball into a net, for instance, you have to get an actual paramecium to do it for you. .. Continue Reading Players control real microorgansims in 'biotic video games'