Developer's dilemma : the secret world of videogame creators / Casey O'Donnell.
2014
QA76.76.C672 O36 2014eb
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Title
Developer's dilemma : the secret world of videogame creators / Casey O'Donnell.
ISBN
0262322838 (electronic bk.)
9780262322836 (electronic bk.)
9780262028196
0262028190
9780262322836 (electronic bk.)
9780262028196
0262028190
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : The MIT Press, [2014]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xii, 337 pages).
Call Number
QA76.76.C672 O36 2014eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
794.8/1526
Summary
"Rank-and-file game developers bring videogames from concept to product, and yet their work is almost invisible, hidden behind the famous names of publishers, executives, or console manufacturers. In this book, Casey O'Donnell examines the creative collaborative practice of typical game developers. His investigation of why game developers work the way they do sheds light on our understanding of work, the organization of work, and the market forces that shape (and are shaped by) media industries. O'Donnell shows that the ability to play with the underlying systems -- technical, conceptual, and social -- is at the core of creative and collaborative practice, which is central to the New Economy. When access to underlying systems is undermined, so too is creative collaborative process. Drawing on extensive fieldwork in game studios in the United States and India, O'Donnell stakes out new territory empirically, conceptually, and methodologically. Mimicking the structure of video games, the book is divided into worlds, within which are levels; and each world ends with a boss fight, a "rant" about lessons learned and tools mastered. O'Donnell describes the process of videogame development from pre-production through production, considering such aspects as experimental systems, "socially mandatory" overtime, and the perpetual startup machine that exhausts young, initially enthusiastic workers. He links work practice to broader systems of publishing, manufacturing, and distribution; introduces the concept of a privileged "actor-intra-internetwork"; and describes patent and copyright enforcement by industry and the state."
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OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
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