Games no longer where careers 'go to die'

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Actor Christopher Judge says gaming: "Used to be where you went when your career was over in front of camera."Now the man who plays lead
character Kratos in the newly released God of War, claims that perception is changing."Reading the script for the first time, I thought it
was for a big A-List film," he tells Newsbeat."Now every actor I know is searching for a lead role in a game," he says.The latest in the God
of War franchise has marketed itself as a tale of a parent struggling to develop a relationship with his son
It takes Kratos, one of the most iconic gaming characters of recent years, and gives him an emotional depth and complexity that the series
has never seen before
Christopher says he had "no clue" he was reading a script for a video game when it was emailed to him.Video caption How God of
War is hoping to explore more complicated emotions than previous major gaming titles "I'm sure my agents purposefully didn't tell
me it was for a game because I'd been staunchly against doing them in the past," he says
Performing in video games has been a very specialist art form until recent years - a domain for actors who performed mostly in games and did
not appear on television screens all that often
Christopher says he was some way through he process of auditioning before realising the true nature of the project: "I had to act out the
audition."That's something you don't have to do for theatrical auditions, so that was my first clue."The material was so good though I
didn't care, and after a further call back I was told it was for a game but I was fine with it because it didn't seem to be written like
that
"Then I was even called to do a chemistry test (with 10-year-old Sunny Suljic who plays the son of Kratos in the game) and I called my agent
and said, are you sure this is for a game!" Big name actors have provided voices for games for years, mainly though in supporting roles
Samuel L Jackson in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Natalie Dormer in Mass Effect: Andromeda and Michael Fassenbender in Fable 3 are just
some examples.However in recent years more and more familiar faces from the silver screen have provided full motion capture performances or
voiced lead characters as well
Kit Harrington starred in Call of Duty: Infinity Warfare, Ellen Page performed for Beyond Two Souls and Kiefer Sutherland voiced Big Boss in
Metal Gear Solid 5
They're just three examples
Christopher, famous for his roles in Stargate SG-1 and Batman: The Dark Knight, tells us that the perception of acting in games has been
changing for some time: "It used to be where you went when your career was over in front of camera."However the notion that games are where
old actors go to die was slowly starting to dissipate because Kevin Spacey had just done a lead in a game."Image caption Christopher Judge
with our gaming reporter Steffan PowellHe tells us: "Now every actor I know is searching for a lead role in a game so that's how far the
industry has come."Games are not just about the gameplay any more, but about the stories."There are wonderful tales to be told in this
medium, and it truly is just another form to exercise your craft."Follow Newsbeat on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter