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a forum for the uses of videogames in advertising, politics, education, and other everyday activities, outside the sphere of entertainment
ABOUT About This Site - RSS Feed Ian Bogost (editor) Gonzalo Frasca (editor) SPONSORS
COMMUNITY
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ABOUT WATER COOLER GAMES
Water Cooler Games is a site about videogames with an agenda. It is about games that go beyond entertainment. Water Cooler Games explores the emerging field of games want to do more than simply being fun: they want to make a point, share knowledge, change opinions. This includes new genres such as advergaming, newsgaming, political games, simulations and edutainment. If you think that video games have a strong potential for communication, persuasion and education, come and join our discussion by the Water Cooler. Water Cooler Games is edited by Ian Bogost and Gonzalo Frasca, two of the world's leading videogame researchers and designers of videogames with an agenda. About Ian Bogost Dr. Ian Bogost is a videogame designer, critic, and researcher. He is Assistant Professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Founding Partner at Persuasive Games LLC. His research and writing considers videogames as an expressive medium, and his creative practice focuses on games about social and political issues. Bogost is author of Unit Operations: An Approach to Videogame Criticism (MIT Press 2006), recently listed among "50 books for everyone in the game industry," and of Persuasive Games: The Expressive Power of Videogames (MIT Press 2007), along with several other books and many other writings. He is a popular speaker and widely considered an influential thinker and doer in the videogame industry and research community. Bogost's videogames about social and political issues cover topics as varied as airport security, disaffected workers, the petroleum industry, suburban errands, and tort reform. His games have been played by millions of people and exhibited internationally at venues including Laboral Centro de Arte (Madrid), Fournos Centre for Digital Culture (Athens), Eyebeam Center (New York), Slamdance Guerilla Game Festival (Park City), the Israeli Center for Digital Art (Holon) and The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (Melbourne). Bogost is currently co-authoring a book on the Atari 2600 along with a number of new videogames for that platform. He is also completing a game about the politics of nutrition, commissioned by PBS and the iTVS, and designing editorial "newsgames" in a groundbreaking game publishing relationship with the New York Times. Bogost holds a Bachelors degree in Philosophy and Comparative Literature from the University of Southern California, and a Masters and Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from UCLA. He lives in Atlanta with his wife and two children. Ian can be contacted at . His website is http://www.bogost.com. About Gonzalo Frasca Gonzalo Frasca is both a game designer and academic game researcher (balancing those two aspects of his life is harder than most RTS games). He has been working in videogame theory for almost a decade now. He publishes Ludology.org, an online resource for academic game research and he is Editor at Game Studies, the international academic journal. A former head of game production at Cartoon Network LA, he later co-founded an independent game development studio: Powerful Robot Games. He launched Newsgaming.com, an independent project examining the boundaries between journalism and videogames. Frasca also has extensive experience working in media (CNN) and advertising. He currently works at the Center for Computer Game Research in Copenhagen. Gonzalo can be contacted at .
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QUICK NEWS LINKS
Go Buy Braid
If you own an Xbox 360, it is imperative that you go buy Jonathan Blow's newly released game Braid immediately. ... Suffering under Global Poverty Ack. Check out the Race Against Global Poverty Game. According to its sponsors, the game is supposed give "children living ... You'll wish it had stayed dead To promote Universal Pictures' new film The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, the studio created an advergame, Chariot Chase ... Return to Death Race The 1975 film Death Race 2000 inspired the 1976 arcade game Death Race, by Exidy. In the game, players tried ... Local Conflicts The Jerusalem Post has published a very negative, dismissive review of Serious Games Interactive's Global Conflicts: Palestine. Apart from noting ... Coupongaming Editorial: The End of Gamers Lockdown: A School Shooting Game Yes Men Exhibition Kiwi Training Games FAVORITES Does expression come in HD too?
Food Force
A Force More Complicated
PSP and Performance Intelligence
A Review of the Leapster
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| Copyright © Ian Bogost & Gonzalo Frasca, unless otherwise noted. Re-printing for commercial purposes by permission only (contact us: ). Re-printing for educational purposes is allowed with proper attribution. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||