Authors
Thomas Smith, Marianna Obrist, Peter Wright
Publication date
2013/6/24
Book
Proceedings of the 11th european conference on Interactive TV and video
Pages
131-138
Description
Video games are inherently an active medium, without interaction a video game is benign. Yet there is a growing community of video game spectating that exists on the Internet, at events across the world and, in part, as traditional television broadcasts. In this paper we look at the different communities that have grown around video game spectating, the incentives of all stakeholders and the technologies involved. An interesting part of this phenomenon is its relation to the malleability of activity and passivity; video games are traditionally active but spectatorship brings an element of passivity, whereas television is traditionally passive but interactive television brings an element of activity. We explore this phenomenon based on selected examples and stimulate a discussion around how such understanding from the video game field could be interesting for interactive television.
Total citations
2014201520162017201820192020202120222023202454212438424845353521
Scholar articles
T Smith, M Obrist, P Wright - Proceedings of the 11th european conference on …, 2013