dirksonguer + z3 + gaming   52

ThinkGeek :: Sifteo Interactive Gaming Cubes
We have been fighting over who gets to play with the Sifteo sample here at the office. These little blocks are addicting! Imagine all the fun of your favorite puzzle games meeting the touch-sensitivity of your smartphone meeting the accelerometer of your Wiimote. And the best part? It comes with the ability to write your own games!
stifteo  games  gaming  platform  play  z3 
6 weeks ago by DirkSonguer
How I Helped Destroy Star Wars Galaxies » Medium Difficulty
Ironically, those voices were the same people who happily handed Tan money for the credits I provided. Happily handed me stacks of cash for Jedi accounts. Did I help in the demise of SWG? Yes. That is something I accepted long ago. The game that I loved so much, I helped to destroy
mmog  gaming  starwarsgalaxies  z3  farming 
11 weeks ago by DirkSonguer
Saturday, July 2 | storyworlds across media
Even though narratology was conceived as a transmedial endeavour from its very beginnings in Russian formalism and French structuralism, most of its more influential models have been – and continue to be – developed in the context of literary criticism and film studies. In contemporary media culture, however, the creation of storyworlds is not limited to literature and traditional feature films. Rather, emerging forms of multimodal and interactive narration, experiments with the distinction between fictional and nonfictional narrative, various forms of intermedial adaptation, and attempts at ‘transmedia storytelling’ create new ways of presenting narrative content, thereby calling attention to the affordances and limitations of different narrative media as well as to their potential for cooperation. The increased interest in the relation between media and narrative sparked by the development of digital technology and the recent proliferation of delivery techniques in the context of media convergence has reinforced the need for an interdisciplinary and transmedial narratology that studies storyworlds across media.
media  story  video  gaming  gamedesign  stories  storytelling  z3 
february 2012 by DirkSonguer
Ten, Eleven, Twelve | Hide&Seek - Inventing new kinds of play
There will be no escaping games in 2012. From the Olympics to hit shows on TV, lucrative games on your mobile phone to innovative live events, games are more a part of our everyday lives than they’ve ever been.
This briefing document looks ahead to the key issues that can help guide your strategy in 2012. And, since the gaming world evolves fast, we’ve drawn some concrete examples of these trends from front-runners in 2011, so you can get to grips with what they mean in practice. 
games  gaming  study  paper  z3 
january 2012 by DirkSonguer
Books about people « #AltDevBlogADay
Over the years, my job gave me the priviledge of meeting amazing people. People who had a deep impact on my career, on my knowledge, on my personalty, and on what I am as a whole.

That must be why I am so fond of stories about game development that focus on people. The technology keeps changing, but the motivation that drives it remains. The people who shaped one way or another what our industry looks like today are for me an endless source of inspiration and motivation.

So I decided to share with you a few books I recently read, both have the same focus on the people behind the technology rather than on the technology itself.
games  gaming  gamedesign  literature  books  z3 
november 2011 by DirkSonguer
If Quake Was Made Today…
As a bunch of “old-school” RPG fans hang out here, we’re accustomed to griping about how “dumbed down” RPGs have become over the years.

But it’s not just our favorite genre. As much as we complain about RPGs becoming first-person shooters, first-person shooters aren’t what they used to be, either.

To illustrate this point, this excellent video by kmooseman
games  gaming  gamedesign  simplify  fun  video  z3 
november 2011 by DirkSonguer
who killed videogames? (a ghost story) | insert credit
The larger man spoke. He gestured while doing so. “You teach the player how to play the game in one minute. Within that one minute, you give them in-game money. You make them spend all of that money to buy an investment that will begin to earn them profit. They build a thing. It says: this thing will be finished in five minutes. Spend one premium currency unit to have it now. You happen to have one free premium currency unit. The game makes you use it now. Now you have a thing. Now it says to wait three minutes to collect from that thing. So they have a reason to stick around for three minutes. When those three minutes are up, you tell them to come back in a half an hour. You say, ‘You’re done for now. Come back in a half an hour.’ The phone sends them a push notification in a half an hour. Right here, you’re telling them to wait. You’re expressing to them the importance of patience. They’re never going to forget the way it feels to wait a half an hour after playing a game for one minute. They’re going to forget the second time they wait for a half an hour, and the third time, and they’ll then not forget the first time they have to wait for four hours, then twenty-four hours. This is why they’ll start to pay to Have Things Right Now.
socialgames  gaming  gamedesign  psychology  z3 
october 2011 by DirkSonguer
DICE 2010: "Design Outside the Box" Presentation Videos - G4tv.com
Carnegie Mellon University Professor, Jesse Schell, dives into a world of game development which will emerge from the popular "Facebook Games" era.
future  gamification  gaming  gamedesign  jesseschell  talk  z3 
october 2011 by DirkSonguer
Gamifaction: Was Sie von Angry Birds lernen können | pr-blogger.de
Spielen ist Lernen – auch wenn es auf den ersten Blick schwerfällt, in dem über 350 Millionen mal heruntergeladenen Casual Game Angry Birds mehr als nur Zeitvertreib zu sehen. Und den suchen nicht wenige von uns:  Fast jeder zweite deutsche Internetnutzer besucht Online Gaming-Seiten. Knapp 40 Prozent der Smartphone Besitzer nutzen ihr Handy zum Spielen (comscore 2011). Kein Wunder, dass mehr und mehr darüber nachgedacht wird, den Gebrauch von Produkten oder Services für Nutzer mit Erfolgsfaktoren aus dem Spielesektor attraktiv und belohnend zu gestalten. Das Zauberwort heisst Gamification.
gamification  gaming  gamedesign  z3 
october 2011 by DirkSonguer
The Lack of Itagaki's Trash Talk Saddens Tekken's Harada
Tomonobu Itagaki spent the better part of two decades at Tecmo and Team Ninja, where his major projects included developing the Dead or Alive fighting game series and making sure you knew the competition (Tekken in particular) wasn't any good. He left the developer several years ago and is now working on action game Devil's Third at Valhalla Game Studios. In other words, he's no longer in the fighting game business and therefore no longer trash talks the competition -- and it's exactly that which Tekken boss Katsuhiro Harada misses.
gaming  doa  tekken  interview  gamesindustry  z3 
october 2011 by DirkSonguer
Tobold's MMORPG Blog: At the borders of legal justice
Bernie Maddoff is in jail for the next 150 years. He misled investors with a Ponzi scheme, a scam in which you promise people a high return on investment, which you pay not with any real business, but with the money new investors give you. In real life, this is fraud, and if you are caught you will go to jail for it. In a game, for example if I offer you a dodgy deal for a street in Monopoly counting on the fact that you are bad with numbers, this is part of the game and I won't go to jail for it. It's just play money. But what of situations that are in between?
gamedesign  games  gaming  scams  eve  z3 
august 2011 by DirkSonguer
A Brief History of Wing Commander
Okay, you may not think two full articles to be all that brief, but considering the scope and significance of the series, this seems pretty well abridged to me. G4TV has a two-part history of the series
wingcommander  gaming  history  z3 
august 2011 by DirkSonguer
QBlog
OK, so this basically gives me permission to ramble on a bit about how games evolve over time. Designers can stop reading now, there's nothing here you don't already know...

I suppose, as I'm stating the obvious, I should begin by pointing out that there are four kinds of changes that happen to games.
games  gaming  gamedesign  z3 
july 2011 by DirkSonguer
Tobold's MMORPG Blog: Valuing time over money
I don't play golf. But if I did, and I'd tell my colleagues at the office that I spent €250 on a golf club, they would nod wisely and say that this is what a decent golf club costs. But if I told them I spent 2,500 hours on the driving range training, they would think I'm crazy. Online players think differently. They'd nod wisely if I told them I spent 2,500 hours in an online game, and think I'm crazy because I spent €250 on World of Tanks. I didn't spend 2,500 hours in WoT, but I did 2,500 battles, so well over 250 hours, which at less than 1€ per hour still is cheaper than most other forms of commercial entertainment.
games  gaming  motivation  z3 
july 2011 by DirkSonguer
Fear And Monocles — Broken Toys
First, the Eve playerbase feels both empowered and angry. They feel very much as though they should have a voice in how the game is run. CCP has not disagreed with this, and their “Council of Stellar Management” player advisory council is currently winging its way to Iceland, at CCP’s expense (and knowing the expense of last-minute airline reservations, more than cancelling any benefit from selling virtual monocles). We’ve seen player protests in MMOs before, but this is the first overt player riot - enabled in part by Eve’s own strengths of being a unitary server game so that if, say, someone decides it’s a good idea to shoot up a statue commemorating the in-game NPC leaders as a political gesture, it can get legs.
eve  gaming  communities  communitymanagement  z3 
july 2011 by DirkSonguer
Eve Developers, Player Reps Meet, Issue Statements, No Monocles Harmed — Broken Toys
CCP Zulu (aka Arnar Hrafn Gylfason, Eve’s senior producer)

The investment of money in EVE should not give you an unfair advantage over the investment of time. The CSM, under NDA, has been presented with CCP‘s plans for continued evolution of the business model and agrees that nothing they saw breaks this principle. CCP has committed to sharing their plans with the CSM on this front on an ongoing basis.

The Mittani (aka Alexander Gianturco, Eve’s senior politician)

We believe that the situation that has unfolded in the past week has been a perfect storm of CCP communication failures, poor planning and sheer bad luck.  Most of these issues, when dealt with in isolation, were reasonably simple to discuss and resolve, but combined they transformed a series of errors into the most significant crisis the EVE community has yet experienced.
eve  gaming  communitymanagement  communities  z3 
july 2011 by DirkSonguer
Team Meat (Super Meat Boy!) - Watch this now!
Holy god.. that trailer makes me relive so many horrible memories.. yet is just so awesome.

For those of you who dont know, Tommy and i were both documented by a tiny 2 person team called Blink Works on and off for about a year during the middle-end of development of Super Meat Boy. We met them at GDC the year we lost at the IGF.. they approached us after the loss and told us they were thinking about doing a short documentary about indie games. They had been talking to many indie devs and wanted to do something that could show the world the life of an indie game designer, we agreed and they followed us back to santa cruz. For the next 9+ months of development our lives were peppered with their cameras and almost sickeningly kind and gentle nature (they are Canadian).
gaming  video  documentation  z3  indie  gamedev 
june 2011 by DirkSonguer
The seduction secrets of video game designers | Technology | The Observer
Video games, we have been led to believe, are about wasting time. It is a misunderstanding that players and game makers have railed against for 40 years. While movies and television are endlessly analysed and debated in the mainstream media, games are characterised as troubling, irresponsible or banal, the fatuous byproducts of the digital revolution.

But a growing number of theorists and designers disagree. This is, after all, an entertainment medium that worldwide makes $50bn a year, a medium in which an estimated one third of UK adults indulge. An emerging school of thought, drawing on cognitive science, psychology and sociology, suggests that our growing love of video games may actually have important things to tell us about our intrinsic desires and motivations.
gamedesign  gaming  interviews  z3 
may 2011 by DirkSonguer
The purpose of gamification - O'Reilly Radar
"Gamification efforts have come under criticism from many in the games industry for being shallow..."
Yes, you got that part right.
"-- that is, lacking the narrative quality of games made with a pure entertainment motive."
I don't think you understand the criticism, then, if you think "shallow" simply refers to "less narrative quality".
games  gamification  gaming  gamemechanics  z3 
may 2011 by DirkSonguer
Terra Nova: Gamification
My gamified syllabi in classes, for exampled, have bombed. Students *really* don't want their grades determined by MMORPG mechanicsms. That's because one of the essential conditions of XP acquisition - that you can try and try again indefinitely - are missing in a classroom. In teaching, time is limited. So are mob pulls; you can't have as many shots at challenges as you want. In a classroom, you have a few challenges, time runs out, and somebody - me - has to judge how you did. Also, there are not enough opportunities for loose, flowing grouping; every teamwork exercise in a class is forced-grouping which, we've learned, people hate. Add to that the fact that ultimately the class is serious and not play. This means no one can say "settle down, it's just a game." And therefore, they DON'T settle down. They get almost homicidal when another team-mate screws up their grade.
gamification  gaming  motivation  z3 
may 2011 by DirkSonguer
I, Cringely » Blog Archive » Sony may be clueless in PSN hack - Cringely on technology
Sony’s huge PlayStation Network (PSN) has been down for a week now following the theft of ID and credit card data on some or all of the gaming and video entertainment network’s 77 million customer accounts. Readers have been asking for comment but I stay out of these things unless I have something new to contribute. That something finally comes a week into the crisis as gamers begin to wonder why the network is still not back in operation and speculate on what this all means to Sony? It’s a huge loss of face, if course, but beyond that the damage to Sony is minimal. And the upside for PSN members, including those involved in the many emerging class action lawsuits, is likely to be bupkes. Nothing.
business  security  sony  gaming  platforms  z3 
may 2011 by DirkSonguer
You Need $100,000 [Game Development] - What Games Are
Probably the single biggest thing that stands between the idea of making a great game and the reality of actually doing it is the cost.

Even with agile practices in place, games need a certain level of development before they start to show their potential. The game actions need to extend, the loops need to be in place, the dynamic needs to be coming together and the wins need to build toward something. It needs to develop an aesthetic voice and style, work on the user experience and finally have some level of testing. These things take time and money.

How much? It varies massively depending on what it is, but the bare minimum is $100,000. If you find yourself pitching well below that, it usually portends trouble
business  gamedesign  gamedev  gaming  z3 
april 2011 by DirkSonguer
Is Reality Really Broken? | Edge Magazine
In her new book, Reality Is Broken, Jane McGonigal argues that the rules, rewards and feedback offered by modern videogames can be used to make the world a happier and more productive place. We sit down with her to learn more.
games  gaming  gamification  gamemechanics  interview  z3 
april 2011 by DirkSonguer
The Bottom Feeder: Minecraft Makes Little Girls Cry.
I've been playing Minecraft a lot lately (when I'm not porting our newest game to Windows and iPad), and I will have several things to write about this truly fascinating game. For example, my nine year old daughter is addicted to it, and I thought her first experience with it was telling.
gaming  story  immersion  gamedesign  z3 
march 2011 by DirkSonguer
A Day In The Life Of Minecraft Creator Mojang | Rock, Paper, Shotgun
With exclusive access to Minecraft creators Mojang, I spent a day with Markus ‘Notch’ Persson and his team in their Stockholm offices, from the first meeting of the morning to the Friday afternoon’s booze and gaming relaxation. With kebab in between. Notch talks to us about how he came to be in the position he’s now in, his intentions for Minecraft and Scrolls, and the philosophy behind his game development. I also speak to his colleagues Jakob Porser and Carl Manneh, find out how the team deals with player feedback, their passion for transparency, and Notch’s plans for games after he’s completed Minecraft.
gaming  gamedev  interview  minecraft  z3 
march 2011 by DirkSonguer
Yehuda: Learn to Love Board Games Again:100+ Ways to Rejuvenate the Games You Already Own
Do you have dusty games in the closet that you grew bored with years ago?

Do your kids beg you to play with them, but you can't stand another round of roll-the-die/pick-a-card, move-your-piece, do-what-the-space-tells-you-to-do, and somebody wins a few hours later?

Do you want to add fun and excitement to your life without spending a dime?

In the last fifteen years, board game designers and dedicated board gamers around the world have learned a thing of two about what really makes board games fun for adults. The principles used in modern board game designs can be used to help you rejuvenate your old board games. You, too, can learn to love board games again.
boardgames  games  gaming  gamedesign  z3 
march 2011 by DirkSonguer
The Pink Pigtail Inn: How I left my guild
OK. It’s Friday night and I admit I’ve had a drink or possibly two already, which means that I’m in a mood for talking and sharing, possibly more than I normally would. But sharing is a bit of the point of blogging, isn't it?

There won't be any pretence or cover-up. This is the truth, the reality the way it is, including cracks and less-than-perfect. But even if this post starts in misery, I assure you it will get much better towards the end. Don’t worry. Just have a seat and a pint and relax while I'm sharing my story, OK? And don't forget I love my guild.

Now let's get started, shall we? (Larísa fills a pint to the brim and heads for her favorite armchair, takes a sip and clears her throat before speaking up.)
mmog  gaming  social  community  communitymanagement  z3 
march 2011 by DirkSonguer
Gamers Behaving Badly - Hacks, Cheats, and Griefs on a Grand Scale | Ten Ton Hammer
Eyewitness Accounts of MMO Hacks, Griefs, and Cheats on a Grand Scale
Put enough people in one place and sooner or later someone will test the boundaries. MMORPGs are no exception. Ranging from the hilariously frivolous to the monetarily disastrous, here are five stories of player-fueled negativity that have made an indelible mark on massively multiplayer gaming, plus a bonus interview of gamers taking extraordary steps to restore one MMORPG to its former glory.

The Assassination of Lord British
games  gaming  ultima  griefing  beta  mmog  z3 
march 2011 by DirkSonguer
The Boy Who Stole Half-Life 2 Article - Page 1 | Eurogamer.net
At 6am on 7th May 2004, Axel Gembe awoke in the small German town of Schönau im Schwarzwald to find his bed surrounded by police officers. Automatic weapons were pointing at his head and the words "Get out of bed. Do not touch the keyboard" were ringing in his ears.

Gembe knew why they were there. But, bleary-eyed, he asked anyway.

"You are being charged with hacking into Valve Corporation's network, stealing the videogame Half-Life 2, leaking it onto the internet and causing damages in excess of $250 million," came the reply. "Get dressed."
hacking  piracy  valve  halflife  gaming  z3 
february 2011 by DirkSonguer
What is Gamification and Real World Examples of It « Ada on Startup Marketing (@adachen)
Gamification is a new vocabulary word lately, and there’s even a summit about it. What is the definition of gamification? The word gamification is used to describe companies integrating game mechanics into their non-gaming product or service to drive user engagement. These companies are “gamifying” their products and services by adding light game mechanics on top of them.

What does that actually look like? While the term is relatively new, the tactics aren’t and have already been in play for quite some time. Here are some examples of gamification in action.
gamification  gaming  gamedesign  gamemechanics  z3 
february 2011 by DirkSonguer
Making Men Uncomfortable: What Bayonetta Should Learn From Gaga | Gaming the System: Tanner Higgin
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about Bayonetta. I gave up on it about a month ago, mostly because I found it tedious, incoherent, and punishing (purely from a receptive standpoint), but also because I felt embarrassed playing it. I found myself having to explain the indulgence to my partner, who, while sitting next to me on the couch or passing by the TV, would reel in horror as Bayonetta’s porn star Barbie body fought doll faced angels with stripper like finesse. From an outsider’s perspective, Bayonetta is an encapsulation of all that is wrong with videogames. But I don’t think that is entirely the case, and the shame I felt had more to do with the reception of my partner than what I was actually feeling while playing the game. In fact, quite unexpectedly, Bayonetta exhibits feminist resistances lacking from most other games; however, it is ultimately a failed project because these resistances are not adequately engaged with patriarchal hegemony. Or to put it another way, Bayonetta needs to learn from Lady Gaga.
gamedesign  characterdesign  characters  gaming  games  gaga  z3 
february 2011 by DirkSonguer
Joystick Division - Five Essential Video Game Documentaries
​It's hard to keep track of every event in gaming's past. The industry has grown, fallen, and expanded for over forty years, and it shows no signs of stopping.

The are many wonderful books that follow extensive history of video games, but we'd like to talk about five films that should be watched for a holistic view of the medium. Some of these films may be hard to track down, but check them out if you can because they will make you understand the way other people play games.
games  gaming  history  video  documentation  z3 
february 2011 by DirkSonguer
Adults Need To Play, Too « Bio Break
Christmas is usually pretty fun in our family, and I do my best to add to the flavor of the season. I still make weird faces for the group picture (my hope is that my family will not have any “normal” photos for my funeral collage and instead will have to put pictures of me with my finger up my nose while they weep and say, “We will miss him!”), and I still come up with bizarre wish lists.
gaming  psychology  games  z3 
january 2011 by DirkSonguer
There Shouldn’t Be A Signup Form | Elder Game
When I buy a AAA game from the store, I have a vested interest in liking the game. I’ve plonked $60 down for it, so there’s less of a chance I’ll abandon it just because the installer is annoying, or the tutorial is a bit dull, or because I have to create an account first. I’ll give the game a chance… at least a half hour.

But if it’s a web game, I’m not going to give it more than a minute of my time. That first minute has to hook me, draw me into the second minute. The second minute has to draw me into the third, and so on, until I’m solidly invested in the game.
gaming  investment  login  facebook  openid  account  z3 
january 2011 by DirkSonguer
Kinect Gestural UI: First Impressions (Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox)
Kinect is a new video game system that is fully controlled by bodily movements. It's vaguely similar to the Wii, but doesn't use a controller (and doesn't have the associated risk of banging up your living room if you lose your grip on the Wii wand during an aggressive tennis swing).

Kinect observes users through a video camera and recognizes gestures they make with different body parts, including hands, arms, legs, and general posture. The fitness program, for example, is fond of telling me to "do deeper squats," which it can do because it knows how my entire body is moving. Analyzing body movements in such detail far exceeds the Wii's capabilities, though it's still not going to put my trainer down at the gym out of work.
games  ui  ux  kinect  gaming  z3 
january 2011 by DirkSonguer
lcc.gatech.edu/~bmedler3/papers/Heeter - Game Design and Challenge.pdf
In this manuscript we propose that Challenge-avoiders, also referred to as Impression Managers, are a
heretofore ignored but commonly occurring player type. We consider whether and how eight very
different modern games accommodate Explorers, Challenge-seekers, and Challenge-avoiders and discuss
implications for entertainment and learning game design
gaming  gamedesign  gamemechanics  bartle  taxonomy  z3 
december 2010 by DirkSonguer
Exceed Expectations By Representing the Customer | The Metaverse Mod Squad Blog
It’s really, really easy to exceed customer expectations by doing one simple thing: Have the customer’s back. Customers want to feel like someone is on their side, and being on the customer’s side is the job of the community team.
games  communities  communitymanagement  gaming  social  z3 
december 2010 by DirkSonguer
Sense of progression
Increasingly I find myself drawn to games that have a sense of progression, a feeling of permanence, or some other ‘value’ beyond the immediate sensation of fun. I guess I’m a pretty ambitious, and long-term thinking person, so that naturally spills out into my gaming habits. I want my gaming time to be an investment.
gamedesign  games  gaming  progression  points  z3 
december 2010 by DirkSonguer
Why do we play video games? | split/screen co-op
Playing video games is a time-consuming business. Even the shortest games can take upwards of four hours to complete.

Time, by contrast, is limited; and spare time is an even dearer commodity.

Why then should I prefer to spend time playing games over other activities? I’m not suggesting that I shouldn’t, but there must be a very good reason to justify spending a precious resource.
games  psychology  motivation  gaming  gamedesign  z3 
december 2010 by DirkSonguer
The 5 Degrees of Fun in Games | The Game Prodigy
Exactly how much fun is it possible for someone have playing a game? My game design philosophy has always been that games create an Experience. For the vast majority of games that are made, I would say around 99%, the core experience that companies, student developers, and indie developers are shooting for is for the game to be fun.
fun  games  gaming  psychology  gamedesign  article  english  z3 
november 2010 by DirkSonguer
Has Your Site Been Gamified? - Technorati Advertising
Humans are naturally competitive. (We do call it the ‘human race’, after all!) We like validation of our place in the world. When society provides independent measures of our success, we can contextualize our personal achievements.
gamedesign  gamemechanics  gaming  gamification  article  english  z3 
october 2010 by DirkSonguer
Land Of The Free-To-Play | Edge Magazine
On paper, it sounds like business suicide. Offer up the core of your gameworld and a wealth of its content for free, to anyone willing to give it a taste test. Its roots are in the ’90s, an extension of the razor blades business model, emerging in gaming from the need to combat piracy in certain territories. It found its way into the west most memorably in Jagex’s RuneScape, an MMORPG that launched, completely free for registrants, in 2001. Free-to-play is a draw for one big reason: the numbers add up.
gaming  freetoplay  businessmodel  mmog  money  z3 
october 2010 by DirkSonguer
The Story of Armor Games, Feature Story from GamePro
The history of Flash-game website Armor Games, which both hosts and develops some of the biggest browser-based titles around. Browser games, sometimes referred to as 'Flash games,' are easy to access. There's no install required. They're widely available, with hundreds of websites stabling thousands of games. The price for accessing most of these titles? A highly attractive zero dollars." Our lives changed when the mainstream latched onto the Internet, and it changed again when broadband access replaced dial-up in the workplace. Suddenly, text and images loaded in a blink. Improved streaming technology even let us tinker with games in between waiting for the paperwork or phone call that would fire up their corner of the corporate machine once again.
games  gaming  indie  gamedev  stories  z3 
october 2010 by DirkSonguer
Seth Priebatsch: The game layer on top of the world | Video on TED.com
By now, we're used to letting Facebook and Twitter capture our social lives on the web -- building a "social layer" on top of the real world. At TEDxBoston, Seth Priebatsch looks at the next layer in progress: the "game layer," a pervasive net of behavior-steering game dynamics that will reshape education and commerce.
design  game  gaming  socialmedia  social  video  ted  gamedesign  z3 
september 2010 by DirkSonguer
Dead End Thrills | The Art Of Gaming
Dead End Thrills is a website dedicated to videogame photography, an emerging art form that’s as far from the average screenshot as it is the average photograph. In the virtual worlds of modern 3D games, the snapper has something their traditional counterpart does not: a supernatural level of control. Light, gravity and time are just toggles, sliders and developer commands. The rules of the game can change.
art  flash  game  games  gaming  inspiration  reference  screenshots  videogames  wallpaper  z3 
september 2010 by DirkSonguer
Achievements Considered Harmful? - Chris Hecker's Website
I waded into the debate on game achievements with my lecture at the 2010 Game Developers Conference entitled Achievements Considered Harmful?, with a strong emphasis on the "?". Since the game industry seems to be careening head first into a future of larding points and medals and cute titles on players for just starting up a video game, I wanted to raise awareness of the large body of research studying the impact on motivation from various types of rewards. Trying to be "fair and balanced", I delved into what the data show and what they don't show.
gamedesign  games  gaming  psychology  social  article  english  motivation  z3 
august 2010 by DirkSonguer
The Escapist : News : Professor Abandons Grades for Experience Points
Lee Sheldon is an accomplished screenwriter and game writer, having worked on TV shows like ST:TNG and Charlie's Angels as well as the Agatha Christie series of games from The Adventure Company. He now teaches game design courses for Indiana University's Department of Telecommunications. Instead of assigning his students a grade at the end of the course, he instead starts every student at 0 xp and they earn points through completing quests like solo projects and quizzes in addition to grouping up for guild projects and pick up groups. How many points they have at the end of the course determines their actual "grade."
games  gaming  social  education  english  article  z3 
august 2010 by DirkSonguer
Wonderland: hard to make money on iPhone games with up-front charge | News
Matthew Wiggins of mobile developer Wonderland, creator of the chart-topping Godfinger, has claimed that charging any price for an iPhone game is a mistake.

Following the Canada-only release in March, Godfinger went to no 1 in the charts in 36 hours with no promotion. It also topped the charts come its worldwide release in June.
social  games  gaming  gamedev  publishing  indie  iphone  z3 
july 2010 by DirkSonguer
Real Names
- I’ve always said employees should be using their real names to provide transparency and accountability. If you can’t handle being the public face of a company and all that implies, get another job. It’s that easy. It is not always that FUN, mind you. - My customers are not public citizens. Making them public citizens against their will is crappy. I can think of half a dozen reasons why someone should be allowed to be anonymous, and I’m not going to list them because any one of them is good enough. Want people to stop acting like asshats on the boards? Suspend in game accounts for out of game behavior. Hire more mods. Close the board. Whatever. This is just chickenshit.
communitymanagement  communities  article  english  gaming  z3 
july 2010 by DirkSonguer
UNabusive design, and why you WOULDN'T want to be mean to your players - Wolfire Games Blog
Cactus may get away with abusing his players just for fun, but he's well recognised enough to be invited to talk at the GDC. I for one can't afford even to momentarily bore or annoy my audience, because they'll drop me like a hot coal and move on to something else. It's not like there's any shortage of free alternatives for them to try (none of my games are on that list - ledsen). You don't get any favours when nobody's heard of you (not that any of my games actually are any good).

I don't want to be all negative though, so how about something constructive? Let's have a look at "how not to make your game abusive", so as to preserve the universal balance of... the universe? To do so we'll be exploring three problems which can contribute to making your game particularly annoying: repetition, randomness and incoherence.
gamedesign  gamemechanics  pain  games  gaming  article  english  z3 
july 2010 by DirkSonguer
Norwegian moose foiled by World of Warcraft tactics
A 12-year-old boy in Norway evaded a rampaging moose that had charged him and his 10-year-old sister. When interviewed, he explained that he had used an ability he learned from World of Warcraft.
wow  realworld  gaming  z3 
june 2010 by DirkSonguer

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