(...and also does other stuff, most of which relates to gaming.)

Monday 23 January 2012

Caillois’ Terminology: Alea, Ilinx, Agon, Mimicry, Paidea and Ludus

Caillois has defined four categories for different types of games: alea, ilinx, agon and mimicry.

Alea are games that some form of randomness, for example many board games utilise this.

Illinx are games that heavily involve movement. These games make you move in different ways to get to the finish. The Super Mario Bros. series is a good example of this.

Agon are games that involve some sort of competition; games such as wrestling games are these as they make two players fight against each other.

Mimicry are simulation games: they mimic real life. There are many examples of these as the genre is so broad. The many "tycoon" type games fit into this.

Finally, there are two other important words: Paidea and Ludus.

Paidea: “Physical or mental activity which has no immediate useful objective, nor defined objective, and whose only reason to be is based in the pleasure experienced by the player”. This usually means playing for pleasure. The Sims series of games are a good example; the main game does not revolve around any objectives as they are made by the player.

Ludus: “Activity organised under a system of rules that defines a victory or a defeat, a gain or a loss”. This is basically the opposite of the above. A game that has a lot of rules you need to follow to play and win it would be a good example of this; Chess for example.

Friday 6 January 2012

My Trip to the British Museum

My lecturer said we should blog some brief comments on our trip to the British Museum (for those people who actually ended up going) so I thought I might as well, although I haven't got too many comments.

We started our journey around the museum after Eddie gave us a guide to follow of a few good museum pieces relevant to the ancient games topic. This lead us around various interesting ancient games but the main one we had come to see was The Royal Game of Ur display. It felt good to be able to see the original in person. I unfortunately didn't get any photos of it myself. Besides The Royal Game of Ur, the other pieces we looked at were nice also and again, good to see this stuff in person to get a nice look at it. One of the interesting things we saw was The Royal Game of Ur board marked into one of the giant human headed winged bull gate sentinels.

All in all, I think the trip was worthwile!