This quote embodies a phenomenon in today’s entertainment media culture: the Alternate Reality Game, or ARG. These ARGs aim to bring the audience deeper into the product experience, to rev up the hype. The game’s producers build an elaborate web of interconnected “plot points,” for lack of a better term. These plot points are not overt, not communicated outright. The audience has to dig for it by picking up clues and solving puzzles that lead to the next, and so on.
A recent entry into the world of ARGs is Blizzard Entertainment’s new game, Overwatch – a game whose players are very interested in information about the next character planned for release. It started with a list of character names on a piece of paper seen in the game, with one exception. That started the rumors that this could be the next character to be revealed. Next, Blizzard released a couple of videos on YouTube where a seemingly innocuous blip (below left), actually turned out to be an image; the colors had to be enhanced to reveal a series of numbers (below right). A member of the community converted the hex values to ASCII, and XOR’ed them with the number 23, converting the result back to hexadecimal and mapping to readable letters…which turned out to be a phrase written in Spanish.

Where Does PLM Come In?
An example part file (the names and numbers have been changed to protect the innocent):
S:\22648 COMP-LOGISTICS TAILCROSSER BG-F813\Units Designed By ABC\22648-9399 OP 30 Backup ASM Fixture reworked (same as 22648-9899) See XYZ Folder for new Op80 design\OP80 reworked 4-16-08 same as 22648-9899\Libraries\OP30\Purchase\Stndrd\fd65645_2
Here we have used just about every bit of the Windows character limit (which is 260, for those interested: 3 for the volume designation, 256 for path and file name with extension, and a null terminating character). Anyone that can manage files this way is clearly a talented individual. Much more impressive is that they were part of a 23-person design team that did all of their projects this way. I couldn’t imagine the frustrations of their new hires trying to find anything in this kind of environment.
The benefits of searching for data are pretty clear (see Google). Yet to this day, companies are still using antiquated methods because they think it’s “cheaper” than implementing a PLM system. Our PLM Analytics benchmark and impact analyses have proven otherwise, and that doesn’t include the myriad other benefits a PLM system offers. Let us know if you’re done playing the engineering and design ARG!
FYI, there is no ARG in this post…or is there?