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Showing posts from December, 2025

Women and videogames: blog tasks

  Women and videogames: blog tasks Work through the following blog tasks to complete our work on women in videogames and further feminist theory. Part 1: Background reading on Gamergate Read  this Guardian article on Gamergate 10 years on . Answer the following questions: 1) What was Gamergate?  one of the first fronts of the modern culture wars, driven by social media, misogyny and the weaponised disaffection of young men. 2) What is the recent controversy surrounding narrative design studio Sweet Baby Inc?  People beleived Sweet Baby Inc is secretly forcing game developers to change the bodies, ethnicities and sexualities of video game characters to conform to “woke” ideology. They think that Sweet Baby has written and controlled almost every popular video game of the past five years, shutting straight white men out. 3) What does the article conclude regarding diversity in videogames? The article concludes that diversity in videogames is natural and positive. It sa...

Sims Audience and Industry

  Audience 1) What game information is provided and which three elements help the appeal? The page describes customising Sims, designing homes and building a town, and also explains life stages, careers and relationships, along with social features like visiting friends. The three most appealing elements are creativity, life simulation and the chance to share designs with others. 2) How does the information show participatory culture? Players can create homes, characters and stories, which shows that the game depends on player creativity. The option to visit friends and compare designs shows community involvement. The game encourages players to take an active role rather than just follow a fixed story. 3) What do the reviews suggest about audience pleasures? Reviews show that players enjoy creativity and building their own world. Many enjoy escaping into a calm and controlled environment. They also like achieving goals and forming emotional connections with the Sims they creat...

OSP: Assessment learner response

  OSP: Assessment learner response Your Online, Social and Participatory media assessment was a great opportunity to test yourself on two key aspects of Media Paper Two - an unseen question and a 25-mark synoptic style essay. The first part of your learner response is to look carefully at your mark and grade and comments from your teacher. If anything doesn't make sense, ask your teacher - it's crucial we're learning from the process of assessments and feedback as we move towards your mocks and exams at the end of this year. The second focuses on using the mark scheme as a learning resource and developing our skills in essay planning and structuring. Your learner response is as follows: Create a new blog post on your Media 1 Exam blog called ' OSP assessment learner response ' and complete the following tasks: 1. Type up your feedback in  full  (you don't need to write the mark and grade if you want to keep this confidential). Abdiillah, a very strong Q2 respons...