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Playing on the digital commons: collectivities, capital and contestation in videogame cultureUNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO, CANADA
UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO, CANADA, ncdyerwi{at}uwo.ca This article examines the complex relation of commodity and commons regimes in video and computer game culture. Digital play is today both a multibillion business and the site of numerous do it yourself practices of production and reproduction, ranging from warez networks and abandonware archives through modding (game modification) and machinima-making to the player-created content of massively multiplayer online games. Such practices are variously symbiotic with and antagonistic to commercial gaming. They are the occasion of extraordinary cooperative arrangements between game developers and players, and of fierce disputes over intellectual property. In both cases, video and computer games reveal the subversion of unidimensional media institutions, positing sharp distinction between producers and consumers, by an emergent multidimensionality of new media in which these roles are deeply confounded.
Key Words: commodification interactive games player communities subversion
Media, Culture & Society, Vol. 29, No. 6,
934-953 (2007) This article has been cited by other articles:
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