Mobile Gaming and Beyond
Published by Rudy De Waele March 18th, 2007 in Mobile Lifestyle, 3G, Announcements, Viral, Fun, LBS, Experience Design, Augmented Reality, Mobile Culture, Mobile Monday, Spanish Startups, Awards, Startups, Conversations, Games, Ubiquitous Devices, Mobile Games Tags: 3G, Announcements, augmented reality, Awards, Barcelona, Experience Design, Fun, Games, gaming, lbs, lemonquest, mobile, Mobile Culture, Mobile Games, Mobile Lifestyle, Mobile Monday, mobilemonday, mobilemonday barcelona, momobcn, nicolas, nova, spanish startups, startups, Ubiquitous Devices, Viral, ydreams.
The next MobileMonday Barcelona event on Monday, April 2, focuses on the current state of the mobile gaming industry.
Speakers include Nicolas Nova (Switzerland) - researcher at EPFL (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne), Maarten Noyons (France) - Managing Director, International Mobile Gaming Awards, Ignacio Cavero (Spain) - President and CEO, LemonQuest and a speaker from YDreams, Spain/Portugal.
(introduction below by Fabien Girardin from the Interactive Technologies Group, UPF University)
Currently, the mobile game market is highly dominated by games that have an easy gameplay, few simple rules and do not require special skills to enjoy. These games are mostly clones of successful casual games such as Minesweeper or Tetris.
However, the future of mobile gaming seems to rely on new types of gameplays that embed the new capabilities of mobile phones to sense their context. Like the newly released and successful Wiimote, mobile devices become sensitive to movements (e.g. Nokia N5500), engaging players to physically move as part of the gameplay. In addition, the emergence near-field communication (RFID, Bluetooth, QR codes) and location-aware technologies enable new types of scenarios that link virtual worlds with the players’ physical surroundings. For example, multi-player location-based games played out on city streets and built up urban environments.
The increasing contextual and proximity awareness of mobile devices provide new opportunities for players to engage in collaborative or competitive game settings. In contrast to this pretty picture, many issues such as the operators walled gardens, the size of the screens, network quality and coverage as well as the processing power of the mobile phone challenge the development and deployment of these new types of games. Finally, the Economic future: who is going to pick up the fragmentation and the distribution challenge? Where is the 8 bn mobile gaming market?
As usual, a networking party will follow the conference where participants will enjoy a glass of cava while sharing experiences about life and work. Attendance is free; all you need to do is register and/or confirm your presence for this event at www.mobilemondaybarcelona.com/subscribe/ to reserve one of the 150 seats available.
More details at MobileMonday Barcelona website.
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