Description
Most games are consciously designed with a specific experience or vision in mind. Games are commonly designed for entertainment and competition purposes, but self-expression, social critique, targeted learning, knowledge discovery as well as physical and mental health are also valid design objectives. Determining whether an objective is fulfilled is often quite difficult due to the complexity of modern games and the variability of human responses. For this reason, games are commonly play-tested before being published. However, play-tests are expensive and time-consuming and not all aspects of the game can be evaluated to the full extent before it being published.There is thus a need for more concentrated and systematic work on evaluating / characterising games, its artifacts as well as player experience. Researchers have proposed approaches intended to assist game designers using methods from the field of artificial and computational intelligence (AI and CI, respectively). Still, to our knowledge, there is a surprising lack of generality and validation regarding these methods, even in scientific publications on game design. No central repository for methods currently exists. We thus propose to organise efforts towards the development, analysis, and dissemination of these evaluation methods through an informal interdisciplinary research network - kickstarted by this seminar.
Period | 15 Jan 2023 → 18 Jan 2023 |
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Event type | Other |
Location | GermanyShow on map |
Degree of Recognition | International |