2019
Kankainen, Ville; Kultima, Annakaisa; Meriläinen, Mikko
Motivations of Game Jam Organizers: Case of Finnish Game Jam Community Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on the Foundations of Digital Games, pp. 1-8, ACM, 2019, ISBN: 2153-1633.
Abstract | Links | Tags: Game design, Game jam, Game jam organizers, Games, Intermediaries, Motivations, Volunteering
@inproceedings{Kankainen2019b,
title = {Motivations of Game Jam Organizers: Case of Finnish Game Jam Community},
author = {Ville Kankainen and Annakaisa Kultima and Mikko Meriläinen},
url = {https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-201910013611},
doi = {10.1145/3337722.3341840},
isbn = {2153-1633},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-08-26},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on the Foundations of Digital Games},
pages = {1-8},
publisher = {ACM},
abstract = {In this paper, we examine the motivations and experiences of game jam organizers in Finland. For the purpose of the study, 13 game jam organizers were interviewed in 2018 - 2019. We found that motivations for organizing game jams are diverse but interlinked and can be roughly divided into six categories: Community Building, Community Driven, Education, Passion for Organizing, Supporting Creative Culture and Work Driven. Further, we noted that many organizers end up in their position through happenstance rather than actively looking for the role.},
keywords = {Game design, Game jam, Game jam organizers, Games, Intermediaries, Motivations, Volunteering},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Wiik, Elisa
“More Interaction, More Story, More Lore”: Motivations Related to Game-centric Transmedia Proceedings Article
In: DiGRA '19 - Proceedings of the 2019 DiGRA International Conference: Game, Play and the Emerging Ludo-Mix, DiGRA, 2019, ISSN: 2342-9666.
Abstract | Links | Tags: Defiance, Digital games, Game-centric transmedia, Motivations, Quantum Break, Transmedia
@inproceedings{Wiik2019,
title = {“More Interaction, More Story, More Lore”: Motivations Related to Game-centric Transmedia},
author = {Elisa Wiik},
url = {http://www.digra.org/digital-library/publications/more-interaction-more-story-more-lore-motivations-related-to-game-centric-transmedia/},
issn = {2342-9666},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-08-06},
booktitle = {DiGRA '19 - Proceedings of the 2019 DiGRA International Conference: Game, Play and the Emerging Ludo-Mix},
publisher = {DiGRA},
abstract = {Transmedia research has in the past been mainly interested in defining transmedia and examining transmedia franchises that have their starting point in movies and TV-series. However, there are multiple transmedia constellations that have a game as their starting point and this paper concentrates on two of those, Defiance (Trion Worlds, 2013) and Quantum Break (Remedy Entertainment, 2016). The survey data from these two examples was analyzed by using constructivist grounded theory-informed approach in order to find out what motivates audiences to consume or avoid game-centric transmedia. Ten categories related to consuming game-centric transmedia and five categories related to avoiding it emerged from the data. The motivations to consume game-centric transmedia had a strong focus on narrative aspects. The results differ from earlier transmedia audience studies and suggest the need for more game-centric transmedia audience studies, where the core text is a game instead of a television show.},
keywords = {Defiance, Digital games, Game-centric transmedia, Motivations, Quantum Break, Transmedia},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
2018
Vahlo, Jukka
In Gameplay: The Invariant Structures and Varieties of the Video Game Gameplay Experience PhD Thesis
2018, ISBN: 978-951-29-7168-8.
Abstract | Links | Tags: Agency, Cognition, Emotions, Experience narrative, Factor analysis, Motivations, Performativity, Phenomenology, Storytelling, Variation, Video games
@phdthesis{Vahlo2018d,
title = {In Gameplay: The Invariant Structures and Varieties of the Video Game Gameplay Experience},
author = {Jukka Vahlo},
url = {https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-29-7169-5},
isbn = {978-951-29-7168-8},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-04-14},
urldate = {2018-04-14},
abstract = {This dissertation is a multidisciplinary study on video game gameplay as an autonomous form of vernacular experience. Plays and games are traditional research subjects in folkloristics, but commercial video games have not been studied yet. For this reason, methods and concepts of the folkloristic research tradition have remained unknown in contemporary games studies. This thesis combines folkloristics, game studies and phenomenological enactive cognitive science in its investigations into player–game interaction and the video game gameplay experience at large.
In this dissertation, three representative survey samples (N=2,594, N=845, N=1,053) on “Rewarding gameplay experience” are analyzed using statistical analysis methods. The samples were collected in 2014–2017 from Finnish and Danish adult populations. This dissertation also analyzes data from 32 interviews, through which the survey respondents’ gameplay preferences, gaming memories, and motivations to play were further investigated. By combining statistical and qualitative data analyses, this work puts forward a mixed-methods research strategy and discusses how the findings relate to prior game research from several disciplines and schools of thought.
Based on theoretical discussions, this dissertation argues that the video game gameplay experience as a cultural phenomenon consists of eight invariants in relation to which each individual gameplay experience can be interpreted: The player must demonstrate a lusory attitude (i), and a motivation to play (ii). The gameplay experience consists of explorative and coordinative practices (iii), which engender a change in the player’s self-experience (iv). This change renders the gameplay experience inherently emotional (v) and performative (vi) in relation to the gameworld (vii). The gameplay experience has the dramatic structure of a prototypical narrative (viii) although a game as an object cannot be regarded a narrative in itself.
As a key result of factor analytical studies and qualitative interview analyses, a novel approach to understanding player–game interaction is put forward. An original gameplay preference research tool and a player typology are introduced. This work argues, that, although video games as commercial products would not be intuitive research subjects for folkloristics, video game gameplay, player–game interaction, and the traditions in experiencing and narrating gameplay do not differ drastically from those of traditional social games. In contrast to this, all forms of gameplay are argued to be manifestations of the same vernacular phenomenon. Indeed, folkloristic research could pay more attention to how culture is experienced, modified, varied and expressed, regardless of whether the research subject is a commercial product or not.},
keywords = {Agency, Cognition, Emotions, Experience narrative, Factor analysis, Motivations, Performativity, Phenomenology, Storytelling, Variation, Video games},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {phdthesis}
}
In this dissertation, three representative survey samples (N=2,594, N=845, N=1,053) on “Rewarding gameplay experience” are analyzed using statistical analysis methods. The samples were collected in 2014–2017 from Finnish and Danish adult populations. This dissertation also analyzes data from 32 interviews, through which the survey respondents’ gameplay preferences, gaming memories, and motivations to play were further investigated. By combining statistical and qualitative data analyses, this work puts forward a mixed-methods research strategy and discusses how the findings relate to prior game research from several disciplines and schools of thought.
Based on theoretical discussions, this dissertation argues that the video game gameplay experience as a cultural phenomenon consists of eight invariants in relation to which each individual gameplay experience can be interpreted: The player must demonstrate a lusory attitude (i), and a motivation to play (ii). The gameplay experience consists of explorative and coordinative practices (iii), which engender a change in the player’s self-experience (iv). This change renders the gameplay experience inherently emotional (v) and performative (vi) in relation to the gameworld (vii). The gameplay experience has the dramatic structure of a prototypical narrative (viii) although a game as an object cannot be regarded a narrative in itself.
As a key result of factor analytical studies and qualitative interview analyses, a novel approach to understanding player–game interaction is put forward. An original gameplay preference research tool and a player typology are introduced. This work argues, that, although video games as commercial products would not be intuitive research subjects for folkloristics, video game gameplay, player–game interaction, and the traditions in experiencing and narrating gameplay do not differ drastically from those of traditional social games. In contrast to this, all forms of gameplay are argued to be manifestations of the same vernacular phenomenon. Indeed, folkloristic research could pay more attention to how culture is experienced, modified, varied and expressed, regardless of whether the research subject is a commercial product or not.
