Gamifying the past: Archaeogaming by archaeologists

Research output: Working paperResearch

Standard

Gamifying the past : Archaeogaming by archaeologists. / Nørtoft, Mikkel.

SocArXiv, 2024.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Nørtoft, M 2024 'Gamifying the past: Archaeogaming by archaeologists' SocArXiv. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/fxs6c

APA

Nørtoft, M. (2024). Gamifying the past: Archaeogaming by archaeologists. SocArXiv. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/fxs6c

Vancouver

Nørtoft M. Gamifying the past: Archaeogaming by archaeologists. SocArXiv. 2024. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/fxs6c

Author

Nørtoft, Mikkel. / Gamifying the past : Archaeogaming by archaeologists. SocArXiv, 2024.

Bibtex

@techreport{1e50a77348174084b11ab1ac106d4525,
title = "Gamifying the past: Archaeogaming by archaeologists",
abstract = "This paper is a proof-of-concept that archaeology can now be disseminated to the public easily and cheaply through video games, either online or in a museum or heritage dissemination setting. This paper particularly argues that small, but realistic, interactive, and immersive closed or open-world 3D computer games about cultural heritage with unscripted (but guardrailed) oral conversation can now be created by beginners (such as this author) with free software such as Unreal Engine, Reality Capture, and Convai. This puts the control of dissemination back into the hands of the heritage specialists, making such dissemination feasible in most museum settings at a low cost. These experiments also bridge the communication gap between heritage specialists and professional game developers. Applying heritage 3D photogrammetry models, currently mostly used for documentation, directly in computer games thus unlocks new uses for such data and could potentially draw in many more visitors in heritage museums. Thus, developing tailor-made archaeogames (or games in any context) is now becoming extremely accessible. The case in point is a small game employing 3D-scanned Neolithic longdolmens in a forest clearing, an archaeologist and a reincarnated prehistoric, both conversational AI characters.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Photogrammetry, Artificial intelligence (AI), Gaming, Heritage, Museum, Dissemination",
author = "Mikkel N{\o}rtoft",
note = "SocArxiv Preprint",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.31235/osf.io/fxs6c",
language = "English",
publisher = "SocArXiv",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "SocArXiv",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Gamifying the past

T2 - Archaeogaming by archaeologists

AU - Nørtoft, Mikkel

N1 - SocArxiv Preprint

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - This paper is a proof-of-concept that archaeology can now be disseminated to the public easily and cheaply through video games, either online or in a museum or heritage dissemination setting. This paper particularly argues that small, but realistic, interactive, and immersive closed or open-world 3D computer games about cultural heritage with unscripted (but guardrailed) oral conversation can now be created by beginners (such as this author) with free software such as Unreal Engine, Reality Capture, and Convai. This puts the control of dissemination back into the hands of the heritage specialists, making such dissemination feasible in most museum settings at a low cost. These experiments also bridge the communication gap between heritage specialists and professional game developers. Applying heritage 3D photogrammetry models, currently mostly used for documentation, directly in computer games thus unlocks new uses for such data and could potentially draw in many more visitors in heritage museums. Thus, developing tailor-made archaeogames (or games in any context) is now becoming extremely accessible. The case in point is a small game employing 3D-scanned Neolithic longdolmens in a forest clearing, an archaeologist and a reincarnated prehistoric, both conversational AI characters.

AB - This paper is a proof-of-concept that archaeology can now be disseminated to the public easily and cheaply through video games, either online or in a museum or heritage dissemination setting. This paper particularly argues that small, but realistic, interactive, and immersive closed or open-world 3D computer games about cultural heritage with unscripted (but guardrailed) oral conversation can now be created by beginners (such as this author) with free software such as Unreal Engine, Reality Capture, and Convai. This puts the control of dissemination back into the hands of the heritage specialists, making such dissemination feasible in most museum settings at a low cost. These experiments also bridge the communication gap between heritage specialists and professional game developers. Applying heritage 3D photogrammetry models, currently mostly used for documentation, directly in computer games thus unlocks new uses for such data and could potentially draw in many more visitors in heritage museums. Thus, developing tailor-made archaeogames (or games in any context) is now becoming extremely accessible. The case in point is a small game employing 3D-scanned Neolithic longdolmens in a forest clearing, an archaeologist and a reincarnated prehistoric, both conversational AI characters.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Photogrammetry

KW - Artificial intelligence (AI)

KW - Gaming

KW - Heritage

KW - Museum

KW - Dissemination

U2 - 10.31235/osf.io/fxs6c

DO - 10.31235/osf.io/fxs6c

M3 - Working paper

BT - Gamifying the past

PB - SocArXiv

ER -

ID: 397655370