Researcher Asks "Why Do We Play Games?"

The Wooster

King Snap
Jul 15, 2008
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Researcher Asks "Why Do We Play Games?"


An upcoming research project attempts to explain the appeal of videogames.

I'm assuming that since you're here on The Escapist you probably enjoy the odd videogame or two, but can you tell me why? I certainly can't explain my fascination with the medium and why, of all the different ways I could entertain myself, I always end up coming back to games. A new study, due to be published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science, seeks to explain why so many people are attracted to the hobby.

Working with academics in Germany and the United States, Dr. Andy Przybylski, a visiting research fellow at the Department of Psychology in Essex University, studied thousands of dedicated gamers playing games such as Call of Duty, World of Warcraft and The Sims in a laboratory environment. The research discovered that gaming is the ideal platform to "try on different hats" in that it allows gamers to take on characteristics of their ideal self. The research found that taking on a new identity in game, even one drastically different from the gamer's own, made them feel better about themselves and view themselves in a less negative light. Dr. Przybylski does mention that games offer a sense of accomplishment and competence that gamers might not be able to achieve in meatspace, but on the whole he is astoundingly positive about the experiences games can offer.

"I was heartened by the findings which show that people were not running away from themselves but running towards their ideals," he said. "They are not escaping to nowhere they are escaping to somewhere."

While some might dismiss Dr. Przybylski's research as stating the obvious, personally I think it's pleasant to see a scientist trying to find the positive aspects of the medium rather than just the negative ones. On the other hand, if the games we enjoy the most are those that represent our ideal selves, then my ideal self is a sexually ambiguous, genderless, asbestos-clad mercenary that scuttles around burning people to death and collecting hats [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pC_aGQyFETU]. Hmm ...

Source: Psychological Science [http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/news/releases/getting-to-the-heart-of-the-appeal-of-videogames.html] via Eurogamer [http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2011-08-08-why-are-video-games-fun]


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BoredDragon

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Feb 9, 2011
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*nods in agreement to all findings*

All these reasons make sense, but I would also add it's easiest medium to get immersed in since you're actively participating in what is happening in the world.
 

RA92

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Jan 1, 2011
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I wonder gamers, whose mantle do you love to take up in games?

I love to fill in the personas of weapon spitting, unthinking machines of speedlust in WipeOut!
 

Worr Monger

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Jan 21, 2008
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I think the name of this place explains it well enough. "The Escapist"

That's exactly why I play games. Reality can, at times be: dull, a pain in the ass, or downright dreadful. It's nice to be able to escape reality and live in an artificial world for while.

It's akin to the holodeck on Star Trek: The Next Generation. When people are tired of their real existence, they might want to escape to a more interesting, fantastic world, where they can be someone else, relieve stress by blasting monsters (or people), or just distract their mind for while by playing something like Bejeweled.

It's a way of experiencing things that are otherwise impossible in reality.... Also a way of experiencing different feelings & emotions without actually getting off your ass... how great is that?
 

Unstable Ark

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Jul 26, 2011
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I never took the time to study it myself, but it makes me feel at ease. I'm not certain if I''m escaping to my "ideal self", but whatever it is, and whether what I'm doing is considered escaping or not, I wouldn't trade it for anything. I'll just let it be a mystery for now.
 

Racecarlock

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Jul 10, 2010
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Didn't I ask this already? http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/read/9.299985-Why-do-you-play-games
 

brunothepig

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Grey Carter said:
Just want to say, if you guys (Escapist newsies) could publish another news story when the study is properly published in Psychological Science, that'd be great. I feel it might be quite an interesting read.
OT: It sounds obvious to us, and it is a little, but for outsiders to our love this may help public perception (I'm in an optimistic mood ok, maybe it's the sleep deprivation), at the very least it's cool how succinctly the researcher summed up a large factor of why we game.
 

Fensfield

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Nov 4, 2009
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Science confirms what us roleplayers have suspected for a long time, I guess XD

'Looking forward to the study results being published and all o.o
 

ultimasupersaiyan

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My reason for gaming is the same reason I read books. To escape into facinating new worlds. Esapism is the main reason most of us play video games.
 

Prisma D. Cry

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Jul 9, 2011
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people were not running away from themselves but running towards their ideals, they are not escaping to nowhere they are escaping to somewhere.

Sounds like Tao teaching to me ( =_=)b convincing
 

comadorcrack

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Mar 19, 2009
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I play games because they help me.
I have dsypraxia, a form of dyslexia that affects balance and hand eye co-ordination.
So growing up I found it hard to do simple things like throw a ball straight or ride a bike. I started playing the NES when I was like 6 or 7 and my co-ordination drastically improved. I found that moving my avatar on screen made me focus on the screen rather than what my hands were doing and it really helped me learn to do things instinctively rather than everything being an uphill struggle.
Ever since then I've never really stopped playing games. I wouldn't regress or anything if i stopped playing, but I find they help calm me down when I'm trying to do something that I find difficult and allows me to approach the problem in a different way.
So really I owe games a lot without them everything I do now would be much more of a struggle.
 

AngryBritishAce

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Feb 19, 2010
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Well yes this is partially why I play games. My ideal would probably be how I always play RPGs, the guy who does the right thing and tries to make the world a better place, and that's what I want to do, however I can.
But also I wish to, as others before me on this thread have said, escape to a magical, almost unreal world and loose myself in the fantasy. I mean I wouldn't play a game that has me in real life making the world a better place, because it would probably just be helping old ladies across the street, at best. I want to go to somewhere or do something impossible and make it seem possible. That is why I play games.
 

l3o2828

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Mar 24, 2011
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Much like books, movies and any other form of medium or art.
ESCAPISM!
It's right there on the title of this page, and besides some games are just FUN, different kinds of fun, but fun none the less!
 

BodomBeachChild

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Nov 12, 2009
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Well, considering I work 40some hours a week at a pretty new, bustling restaurant smack int he middle of Columbus... I need to escape. Restaurant life takes your soul and crushes it. It's nice to get into Tamriel, or Liberty City and be someone else I want to be for a minute. And yes, all my characters are indeed a fictionalized version of...me.

My chefs are EQ addicts, and I am a sandbox/RPG addict. We need lifes other than what we do at work.
 

PrinceofPersia

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Sep 17, 2010
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Because it's fun entertainment and a cathartic release, for me at least. But congrats Dr. Przybylski on your study. I wonder if he found out about the skinner box effect of WoW or any potential negative effects to too much gaming (Longer than 3 hour sessions)?
 

Torrasque

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Aug 6, 2010
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Eh, makes sense.
More or less this:
Paul Palumbo said:
I play them for the experiences I can't get in real life.
I can't don a green power suit and fight aliens.
I can't shoot fire.
I don't own an electric rat.
I'm not a chef or a football player.
But in games, I do all that and more.
Just gonna add:
I can't lead armies in real life.
I can't shoot many interesting guns.
I can't save princesses.
I can't invade Aiur, defend Aiur, destroy the Overmind, or become the Overmind.