Zero-Player Games - What We Talk about When We Talk about Players
Other conference contribution, 2012

Do games need people? If so, what is it that makes people important to games? It can seem self-evident that games are artifacts designed to be used by players, but in this paper we will discuss the paradoxical idea of zero-player games. We do not wish to argue against the study of players, but we believe that many common conceptions of players are too vague to be useful. Based on the examination of zero-player games, we provide five subcomponents to help in the understanding of the player concept. Expressed as questions, these are: Is this a human player? Does the player have agency? Does the player play over time? Does the player appear to have intentionality? Does the player exhibit aesthetic preferences?

games

zero-player games

players

Author

Staffan Björk

University of Gothenburg

Jesper Juul

The Philosophy of Computer Games Conference, Madrid 2012

Subject Categories

Other Computer and Information Science

More information

Created

10/10/2017