🚶🏻‍♀️ Shifting Borders: Walking Simulators, Artgames, and the Categorical Compulsion of Gaming Discourse
Published in Press Start Journal, 2019
Abstract: This paper looks at how the walking simulator and artgame categories intersect, before comparatively analyzing two game designers whose work functions to disrupt the notions of genre these terms exemplify. The first work is Bill Viola’s The Night Journey (Game Innovation Lab & Viola, 2007), a gallery installation that many early game studies scholars used to help them first define how videogames could function as art. Following this, the paper compares Viola’s work to Connor Sherlock’s (2015) cheekily titled “Walking Simulator A Month Club.” With this project, Sherlock uses the itch.io and Patreon platforms to release a new experimental walking simulator game every month. Like The Night Journey, each of Sherlock’s games are ambiguously rendered and non-goal oriented. To conclude, this paper uses these two examples to investigate the potentially useful relations that can be uncovered between the experiences of traversing gallery and game space.
Keywords: walking simulators, art games, game art, Bill Viola, Connor Sherlock, game studies, game criticism, genre
Direct PDF download link: https://press-start.gla.ac.uk/index.php/press-start/article/view/135/93
Recommended citation: Bailey, A. (2019). “Shifting borders: Walking simulators, artgames, and the categorical compulsion of gaming discourse.” Press Start Journal, The University of Glasgow. https://press-start.gla.ac.uk/index.php/press-start/article/view/135
