ABSTRACT

This chapter examines persuasive games through the dominant arguments made about the value of such designed play. Beyond the who, what, and where, there is the why. Why do researchers and practitioners want to persuade people through games? Why are games the right—or potentially wrong—medium for delivering persuasive messages? Why has public discourse come to need games as a vehicle for communicating and argumentation? Why has the design of such play grown into an increasingly media-rich environment that is seemingly adrift, unable to decant the real from its opposite?