Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Not All Games Play the Same: Specifying How Components of Video Games May be Associated With Creativity

2024; Wiley; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/jocb.1522

ISSN

2162-6057

Autores

Darian Stapleton, Thalia R. Goldstein,

Tópico(s)

Virtual Reality Applications and Impacts

Resumo

ABSTRACT Understanding the impacts of digital media such as video games is critical for scholarship during the digital transformation. While the literature on the effects of video games continues to grow, there is little work on positive effects, including creativity, either as an outcome from or process within games. Video games are a media type that often requires creative problem‐solving and multiple idea generation. Importantly, adequately theorizing, measuring, and assessing creativity as both an action within video games and a possible outcome of engaging with video games necessitates a detailed understanding of what video games are. Here we propose and outline a taxonomy of the various components within video games that could impact different aspects of creativity interventions and creative processes. We then break down those components, including genre, graphics, mechanics, instructions, incentive systems, and multiplayer functionality. We apply this taxonomy briefly in several games, and Minecraft and Baldur's Gate 3 are used in more depth to show how researchers can apply our proposed framework. Knowing which video game components affect which creativity outcomes can clarify our understanding of creativity and the creative process in a digital world, and identify how gameplay itself can be a creative artifact.

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