half real
↑Jesper Juul, ↑the ludologist, has published his book ↑half-real—here’s the ↑about:
Locating video games in a history of games that goes back to Ancient Egypt, Juul argues that there is a basic affinity between games and computers. Just as the printing press and the cinema have promoted and enabled new kinds of storytelling, computers work as enablers of games, letting us play old games in new ways and allowing for new kinds of games that would not have been possible before computers. Juul presents a classic game model, which describes the traditional construction of games and points to possible future developments. He examines how rules provide challenges, learning, and enjoyment for players, and how a game cues the player into imagining its fictional world. Juul’s lively style and eclectic deployment of sources will make Half-Real of interest to media, literature, and game scholars as well as to game professionals and gamers.
↑JUUL, JESPER. 2006. ↑Half-Real: Video games between real rules and fictional worlds. Cambridge, MA: ↑MIT Press.
via entry at the ludologist