Back to Search Start Over

Assassins, Gods, and Androids: How Narratives and Game Mechanics Shape Eudaimonic Game Experiences

Authors :
Daneels, Rowan
Malliet, Steven
Geerts, Lieven
Denayer, Natalie
Walrave, Michel
Vandebosch, Heidi
Daneels, Rowan
Malliet, Steven
Geerts, Lieven
Denayer, Natalie
Walrave, Michel
Vandebosch, Heidi
Source :
Media and Communication; Vol 9, No 1 (2021): Games and Communication—Quo Vadis?; 49-61; 2183-2439; 10.17645/mac.i198
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Emerging research has suggested that digital games can generate entertainment experiences beyond hedonic enjoyment towards eudaimonic experiences: Being emotionally moved, stimulated to reflect on one’s self or a sense of elevation. Studies in this area have mainly focused on individual game characteristics that elicit singular and static eudaimonic game moments. However, such a focus neglects the interplay of multiple game aspects as well as the dynamic nature of eudaimonic experiences. The current study takes a novel approach to eudaimonic game research by conducting a qualitative game analysis of three games (Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, Detroit: Become Human, and God of War) and taking systematic notes on game experiences shortly after playing. Results reveal that emotionally moving, reflective, and elevating eudaimonic experiences were elicited when gameplay notes suggested a strong involvement with the game’s narrative and characters (i.e., narrative engagement) and, in some cases, narrative-impacting choices. These key aspects, in turn, are enhanced by clean player interfaces, graphically realistic characters, close camera perspectives, tone-appropriate soundtrack scores, and both narrative-enhancing (e.g., God of War’s health mechanic) and choice-enhancing mechanics (e.g., Detroit: Become Human’s flowchart). Eudaimonic experiences were also found to evolve throughout the game, with more powerful experiences occurring near the end of the game and some narrative themes fueling the eudaimonic flow of experiences throughout the overall game narrative. This study adds to academic research studying digital games by suggesting an innovative methodological approach that provides a detailed, integrative, and dynamic perspective on eudaimonic game experiences.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Media and Communication; Vol 9, No 1 (2021): Games and Communication—Quo Vadis?; 49-61; 2183-2439; 10.17645/mac.i198
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1456719337
Document Type :
Electronic Resource