About
NBA 2K15 Facescan FAIL refers to poorly-scanned 3D models of players faces using images captured with the PlayStation Eye or Xbox Kinect in the basketball video game NBA 2K15.
Origin
On September 17th, 2014, the NBA 2K YouTube channel uploaded a promotional video for the upcoming NBA 2K game, which showcased the game’s new face scanning technology which creates a 3D model of the player’s face (shown below).
In the early morning on October 7th, Twitter user @Shannah221[1] tweeted a photo of a poorly-modeled NBA 2K15 character (shown below).
Spread
Shortly after, Twitter user @LilCutty[3] posted a photograph of his poorly-scanned NBA 2K15 avatar (shown below). In the first 24 hours, the tweet gained over 500 reweets and 260 favorites.
That morning, other Twitter users began posting photos of their face scans, which were subsequently compiled in an Imgur gallery by Redditor Composingcomposure (shown below). Within 11 hours, the gallery garnered upwards of 1,100 votes (88% upvoted) on the /r/funny[2] subreddit.
Also on October 7th, staff member Owen Good of the video game news blog Polygon uploaded a video of himself failing to use the face scanning application (shown below).
In the coming days, several news sites published articles about the face scanning FAILs, including The Daily Dot,[4] SB Nation,[5] Kotaku,[6] Engadget[7] and UpRoxx.[8]
Notable Examples
Search Interest
External References
[1]Twitter – @Shannah221
[2]Reddit – A collection of face scans from the first hour of the NBA 2K15 release
[4]The Daily Dot – NBA 2K15s facial recognition feature is comically bad
[5]SB Nation – The early NBA 2K15 face scanner results are wonderful
[6]Kotaku – NBA 2K15s Face Technology Fails Miserably Creates Monsters
[7]Engadget – NBA 2K15’s face scanning creates frightening players