Would You Play a Game That Had No Challenge?
This post is part one in a series of two. So a couple of months back, when I went to hear Anna Anthropy talk at the NYU Game Center, I got into a brief conversation with her about the notion of...
View ArticleHow Many Ways Can Games Challenge Us?
This post is part two in a series of two. Climbing mountains, teaching inner city high school kids, going on scavenger hunts, staging jewel heists, only stepping on every other sidewalk square. We all...
View ArticleCrowdsourcing Games for Change
A screenshot from a game for change called MOLT, in which players diagnose malaria. There’s something magical about the math of crowdsourcing. You bring a bunch of people together and collectively they...
View ArticleCan a Game Ruffle Your Political Biases?
I’m going to be volunteering at the upcoming Games for Change Festival and in the lead up to the festival itself, I thought interviewing some of the nominees for the Games for Change Awards would be a...
View ArticleGames for Change Festival Recap
So I volunteered for both days of the Games for Change Festival and the summit beforehand, and it ended up being a pretty awesome experience. From the games arcade where you could play all of the Games...
View ArticleChoosing a Nonprofit vs. For-profit Game for Change
A screenshot from the online platform and the Zamzee device itself. While AAA video game titles might have multi-million dollar marketing budgets, if you’re making games for change, you probably have...
View ArticleBrief Hiatus
I’ll be taking a hiatus from the blog for a few weeks while travelling. Unfortunately I wasn’t able to line up guest posts in my absence so I’ll be sharing more about games for change with you once I...
View ArticleSeeking Some Answers, Finding Others
The starting character in all Scratch games, who I've unofficially dubbed Scratchy. I ask a lot of questions, which can make me tiresome company at times, especially since I have a particular fondness...
View ArticleCrowdsourcing Thoughts on the Future of Education
Meet the six Zed Omegas. I sometimes find myself saving the most daunting tasks on my plate for later… and later… and later. Which is unfortunate because often they’re the ones that most need doing....
View ArticleThe Cost of Openness in Games
In fiction. especially postmodern fiction, there’s a trope of characters who mutiny against their author (The People of Paper, Six Characters in Search of an Author, At Swim-Two-Birds, etc.). It’s a...
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