Fear of Monsters: Toward an Understanding of the Threat of the Computational Monster Read Through the Theoretical Lens of Game-Play
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Published:2023-11-13
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
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ISSN:1555-4120
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Container-title:Games and Culture
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Games and Culture
Author:
Juel Larsen Lasse1ORCID,
Kampmann Walther Bo1
Affiliation:
1. University of Southern Denmark, Faculty of Humanities, The Department of Media, Design, Education and Cognition, Odense, Denmark
Abstract
This article analyzes the configuration of fear generated by the computational monster in computer games. We view the monster as a computational entity, which we approach through our theory of game-play coupled with the concepts of loss aversion and endowment effect. Of particular interest is player perception of the threat posed by monsters as they perturb the experience of progression and the sensation of control within the game. We scrutinize this aspect from a situational as well as an existential perspective. Furthermore, we advance an analytical scheme of the threat of the computational monster, which is radically different from the traditional academic approach with its emphasis on the representation of monsters. Overall, we argue that the threat players perceive when facing monsters in computer games springs more from the computational nature of monsters—how they upset progression and the feeling of control—and less from the representation of the monster(s).
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
Human-Computer Interaction,Applied Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Communication,Cultural Studies
Reference49 articles.
1. Aarseth E. (2003, August 28–29). Playing research: Methodological approaches to game analysis. Proceedings of digital arts and culture conference. Game Approaches/Spil-veje.
2. Clockwork Game Design