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Game Development Workshop: Prototype to Game Library

  • August 24, 2022
  • 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
  • Zoom
  • 14

Registration

  • For instructors who are members of historically underrepresented and marginalized identity groups, and/or those teaching at HBCUs, Tribal colleges and universities, Hispanic-serving institutions, or community colleges. Email mprovo@barnard.edu by April 14 to apply.

Registration is closed


Your game may work for you, but how can you ensure that it will work for other people? How can you create a game that another instructor could pick up and use? This interactive workshop covers the requirements for moving your game on to the game library, and how to meet them (so your game moves from L2 to L3, according to Reacting Editorial Board standards). We will consider the different elements of Reacting game templates, building for scalability, providing GM scaffolding in the IM, and making sure that your game includes the potential for contemplating “big questions.” After facilitator Nick Proctor covers the above topics, there will be time for questions, discussion, and individual feedback for how to best apply these lessons to your game.


PRICING
$35 for members
$50 for non-members
$0 for funded registrants (see below)


FUNDED REGISTRATION FOR DEI ADVANCEMENT 
The Reacting Consortium is committed to diversity, equity, inclusion, justice, and belonging. These values inform our work to foster an accessible community, our approach to game development, and our determination to contend with “big ideas.” We have reserved a few free spots in this workshop to advance these values. These spots are for instructors who are members of historically underrepresented and marginalized identity groups, and for those teaching at HBCUs, Tribal colleges and universities, Hispanic-serving institutions, and/or community colleges. If you are interested in applying for one of these spots, please send an email to jworth@barnard.edu with the subject line “Funded GDW Spot (P2GL)” by August  19, 2022. Even if the general spots for this event are sold out, these funded spots may still be available (unless otherwise stated). Please apply and share with colleagues.  


DURATION

60+ Minutes 


PRESENTER/FACILITATOR BIO

Nicolas W. Proctor grew up in Little Rock, Arkansas. After completing his B.A. in history from Hendrix College, he received an M.A. in Diplomacy and International Relations from the University of Kentucky, as well as an M.A. and Ph.D. in American history from Emory University. He is now a Professor of History at Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa, where he has served as department chair and director of the first-year program.

After completing a traditional historical monograph, Bathed in Blood: Hunting and Mastery in the Old South, he reoriented his research to fit the needs of a teaching institution and focused on writing historical role-playing games. These include Kentucky, 1861: Loyalty, State, and Nation, which he wrote with Margaret Storey; Forest Diplomacy: Cultures in Conflict on the Pennsylvania Frontier, 1757; Modernism versus Traditionalism: Art in Paris, 1888-89, with Gretchen McKay and Michael Marlais, and Restoring the World, 1945: Security and Empire at Yalta, with John Moser. His most recent work, Chicago, 1968: Policy and Protest at the Democratic National Convention, was published in 2020. It is based on a prototype that was created by students in his game design seminar in 2012.

To help game authors in the series, he wrote a Game Designer’s Handbook, which is now in its fourth edition. After chairing  the Reacting Consortium’s editorial board, which oversees the development of hundreds of games for use in college classrooms, he has taken on the position of Executive Director of the Consortium as of July 1, 2022. His next project is about the Reconstruction era in Louisiana after the Civil War. He is also working on a game about the escalation of the US role in Vietnam with Jace Weaver and the “Jumonville incident” with Jeff Fortney. He lives in Des Moines, Iowa, with his family, a print shop, lots of books, and too many Legos.


QUESTIONS?
Contact mprovo@barnard.edu

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