El mundo de sistemas

 

This talk was delivered in Spanish as a keynote at the EVA conference in Buenos Aires Argentina. The slides, alas, don’t really convey the talk at all. There is a video, but it’s all in Spanish. At some point I hope to translate what I said and put it here.

If I had to summarize the talk, I would say that it covered a lot of the same sort of ground I have touched on before in terms of the ways in which games teach systems thinking. I open with some discussion of the wide range of stuff that we call “games” — something that is also discussed in the GDCNext talk “Playing with game.” I talk about what a ludic structure looks like (something that folks who read the blog will probably find familiar), and the way in which ludic structures arise naturally in the world, and thereby are playable even though they are not designed games.

And then I move into anecdotes on exploits and loopholes and other ways in which we didn’t grasp everything about the systems we ourselves had designed, in games such as Ultima Online and Star Wars Galaxies. The talk ends on speculation on what we’re doing to the world, as we create systems that break outside of games. Are we the most qualified to do this? We might be.

Slides

PDF

Download it here.

Video