| scat398 said: that's an interesting theory, i've never heard that one. |
Thanks. :) Never knew it was a term used in the industry. The more you know. :P
| scat398 said: that's an interesting theory, i've never heard that one. |
Thanks. :) Never knew it was a term used in the industry. The more you know. :P


American Automobile Association
It doesn't really stand for anything when dealing with games, it just signifies status. A high production, and high quality piece of entertainment.
The true definition of it is a game that has a high production value. High costs excreta. By a top developer
My definition of AAA is a game that gets 90+ average review score
Nobody's perfect. I aint nobody!!!
Killzone 2. its not a fps. it a FIRST PERSON WAR SIMULATOR!!!! ..The true PLAYSTATION 3 launch date and market dominations is SEP 1st ![]()
Anti-Aircraft Artillery
Best example is the infamous 8.8cm Flak ( "88" ) which shot Captain Price squarely in the face in COD2.
If your game isn't capable of being used as artillery in the Console Wars and in fanboy rants (Halo, Kilzone, Uncharted) its not "triple A".
| scat398 said: AAA is actually a term used by the industry for money used in the development process. But many have altered the meaning to be how the game scores by reviewers. |
But when I, rarely, use it, I use it ot define a game that I REALLY liked, like Deus Ex, MGS4 or Xenogears.
Bet with Dr.A.Peter.Nintendo that Super Mario Galaxy 2 won't sell 15 million copies up to six months after it's release, the winner will get Avatar control for a week and signature control for a month.
I think it stands for a game with high production values, a game with a lot of money and work invested in, and thus should result in a huge seller.
I don't know if there is any true definition though, but I found an article from 1998 by game designer Brad Wardell (don't know who he is...)
http://www.stardock.com/stardock/articles/Trenches/Trenches1198.html
Part of the article:
"In order to understand why they would do this we need to have a primer on how the game market works now.
Presently, in 1998 you have basically three types of games: AAA, A, and B games. You’ll hear about these terms from time to time so let’s define them.
AAA game means games that have almost unlimited budgets and are media events. Blizzard is the AAA game company these days. They won’t release anything that doesn’t fall under AAA. They killed Warcraft Adventures not because it was a bad game but because it would have been only an "A" rated game.
AAA, A, and B level games have nothing to do with how good the game is. If I wrote the world’s greatest space invader’s clone today and even if it had great graphics, great sound, and was totally rock solid, it would still be a B class game. Only a handful of games each year make it out as AAA because the bar is so high to be a AAA game. It costs millions of dollars to create a AAA game. My personal favorite game, Total Annihilation, barely makes it out as a AAA game because it didn’t have full motion video through out, the units didn’t talk. It’s a AAA game still but just barely. So even the best and funnest games may not be AAA games. Starcraft is a great example of a AAA game and I’ll use it because it’s also an excellent game.
Games like Entrepreneur, Panzer General and Warlords III would be great examples of A games. They may be as fun or even funner than AAA games but don’t have the budgets behind them of a Starcraft. No full motion video between every level, they are about the game, not the game and experience.
Deer Hunter is a great example of a B class game in quality. Cheap to make. And where Deer Hunter changed the world was in discovering that a B level game can now make as much money, if not more than a AAA game. And believe me, the game designers of AAA game companies are probably sweating a bit about Deer Hunter. Because corporations are about profit and if they can make more money cranking out B titles they will. But that’s for another discussion entirely.
Historically, AAA, A, and B games represented how much money you’d put in and get back. A AAA game may cost a ton to create but they bring back the big bucks. They are the games of the year, they are the 2 million plus unit sellers. Myst, Dialbo, and Starcraft, these are AAA games."

AAA means a game will get you go AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!! because its awesome.
- Wasteland - The Mission.