Labels
RANDOM MUSINGS
on the
fin-de-millénaire games scene . . .
19 October 2000
. . .
Labels
for the type of games we enjoy have been a hot
topic of discussion on the Internet lately, spurred on
by a question in an
interview
from prominent inventor Alan Moon. It has been a
very difficult discussion so far, both on the incoming and on the
outgoing sides. It seems rather muddy on the one end just which
games one wants to include and on the other just what one wants to
achieve in a name, and for what audience. The fact that the original
request is coming from Alan Moon doesn't help us much with the
former as he has been active in both the American and the German
creative streams. And the question remains on the latter whether
a term is being invented to be used only among the "game-aware" to
help them understand what they are talking about, which was the
case in Mr. Moon's interview as probably the general public will
not be exposed to it, or something that will help in gaining
mindshare about games with the general public.
One thought that I haven't seen mentioned so far: the fundamental
principles, the rules of the game as it were, have been been
really well articulated in an
article
by Wolfgang Kramer, which is the first comprehensive attempt I have
seen. Whereas the creators of the games themselves have been
many-handed and there have been many cross influences, it might be
an idea to focus on this sole articulation. And since it first appeared,
as far as I know, in the year 2000 (maybe it has an earlier date
in German?), I might borrow from the movie business'
"Dogma '95"
and suggest the rubric "Kramer 2000".
Laments about omitting inventor's names from games are common in
the community. Some even feel that the names should even appear on
the box. I am less certain of that as, after all, the game box is
part of the marketing of the game so whether the name appears there
really ought to be subservient to that goal. But I recently noticed
that one game box has even gone so far as to list not only its inventor
and developers, but even its playtesters. I wonder if anyone else
has noticed this game? Write me if you know what game I'm talking
about and I will publish the name of the first correct answerer here.
. . .