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Games for health journal · Feb 2015
ReviewNarrative in Exergames: Thoughts on Procedure, Mechanism, and Others.
- Amy Shirong Lu.
- College of Arts, Media & Design, Bouvé College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University , Boston, Massachusetts, USA .
- Games Health J. 2015 Feb 1; 4 (1): 19-24.
AbstractNarratives are stories with a beginning, middle, and end that provide information about the characters and plot. Exergames are videogames that require players to move or exercise. Narratives and exergames have seldom been examined together. Based on my review of the literature, there are five potential opportunities narratives could bring to exergames: Enhanced engagement with characters and with the plot, increased motivation, repeated play sessions, and better behavioral consequence. However, the rewards offered by these possibilities may be offset by the challenges they pose. These challenges include the difficulty in fully integrating narratives into the gameplay, the players' limited information processing capacity, difficulty in measurement, the lack of full understanding of the player-character identification process, and the narrative saturation effects. Innovative research is needed to bridge the two potentially important domains.
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