Just Finished Reading: Ten Things Video Games Can Teach Us (About Life, Philosophy and Everything) by Jordan Erica Webber and Daniel Griliopoulos (FP: 2017) [324pp]
I hadn’t read any pop-Philosophy for a while and as a Gamer this seemed to be an ideal way to get back into a sub-genre I’ve enjoyed in the past. The authors are both writers specialising in video games rather than philosophers with a gaming interest so the focus of the game is definitely from the gaming and gaming industry point of view. It was also less about the philosophy itself (which is what I was expecting it to be about given the title) and much more about the philosophical underpinnings used by various game developers in their games. Interesting but not a huge focus as far as I’m concerned. Although games can work well with a coherent underlying philosophy I never really gave it that much though as I hacked or shot my way through hordes of Orks or Zombies trying to kill me. Much like my interest in music – I like what I hear without knowing much or anything about the artist or group – my knowledge of individual developers or even gaming ‘houses/companies’ is minimal. I certainly recognise the names of companies [like Blizzard] that I’ve played games by before but I’ve never been one to seek out (or avoid) particular ‘brands’ unless they’re consistent stinkers or simply don’t produce the kinds of games I usually play (like sports games which I have zero interest in).
4 comments:
I don't usually think of games as having a philosophy -- programmers, yes, but games? One can 'read' a philosophy into a game like RDR2, I suppose, but few others. Of course, Bioshock is an interesting example since it satirizes objectivism and technohumanism -- at least, as far as I remember.
Apparently BioShock in particular is VERY philosophical. Never played it so don't know for sure. Most of the games I play are either RTS, FPS or RPG so... generally not a lot of actual philosophy involved!
I am amazed you did not DNF. I guess I never thought about game makers having any philosophy but to make money and provide entertainment.
@ Judy: I really try not to DNF unless it's a TOTAL stinker [grin] Although this wasn't what I was expecting and didn't float my boat it was still readable and actually moderately interesting in places [grin]
Yes, apparently at least *some* games have underlying philosophies in them. A reasonable surprise to me - as someone who's being playing them since 1974.... [lol]
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