When reflecting on the portrayal of their research in popular culture, academics might think about films, television shows or websites. The number who consider computer games probably remains slim ā but that is changing.
In fact, games can provide uniquely vivid access to certain kinds of scholarship, according to the head of a new UK-based organisation tasked with bringing the research and entertainment sectors closer together.
āGames provide the player with agency ā you get to understand a situation by being directly involved in the experience and making decisions,ā explained Iain Dodgeon, director of Okre (Opening Knowledge across Research and Entertainment). āOther forms of screen entertainment, where you are just watching content, donāt have that agency. Games can help you relate to research through direct experience.ā
A striking example is Hellblade: Senuaās Sacrifice, in which Dr Dodgeon ā a former medic who went on to become broadcast, games and film manager at the Wellcome Trust ā was āinvolved from a very early stageā. After meeting the team from the Cambridge-based games developers Ninja Theory at a conference, he āwent to their studio where they shared early ideas for a computer game engaging with mental health. I supported them with a small development award to have a conversation with a researcher [Paul Fletcher, Bernard Wolfe professor of health neuroscience at the University of Cambridge] and people with direct experience of psychosis.ā
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The finished game won five Bafta awards when it was released in 2017. It was also praised, recalled Dr Dodgeon, for the way that the central character ā a traumatised Celtic warrior in 8th-century Orkney ā āexperiences psychosis and you are experiencing the world the way she isā. It would be hard to imagine a more visceral way of bringing academic research to the attention of a broad public.
Although Okre is still ācurrently incubated within Wellcomeā, said Dr Dodgeon, it also operates in partnership with UK Research and Innovation, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and Unbound Philanthropy, and will range beyond Wellcomeās biomedical remit. It will organise events and matchmaking opportunities for content creators and researchers right across the range of broadcast and entertainment media, but where does its director see the potential for games in particular?
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Dr Dodgeon flagged up some striking recent examples. For 11-11: Memories Retold, released for the centennial of the armistice in 2018, the developers, Digixart Entertainment Studios and Aardman Animations, worked with First World War historians Peter Doyle and Robin Schafer, so that players got to experience life as both a British and a German soldier. Wellcome helped support the Casebooks Project, a dataset and linked material based on āthe medical records of a pair of English astrologers in the decades around 1600ā. It also provided some of the funding for Astrologaster, released last year, a linked ānarrative-based comedy gameā where players take on the persona of Simon Forman, an āunlicensed medical professional and astrologerā who offers clients advice on personal, professional and medical problems.

The director of the Casebooks Project and historical consultant on Astrologaster was Lauren Kassell, professor of history of science and medicine at Cambridge. The game arose out of a meeting with Jennifer Schneidereit of Nyamyam, an independent games developer. So what are the pleasures and challenges of bringing academic research into a completely different medium?
āAs the game developed,ā replied Professor Kassell, āCasebooks provided selections of material from Formanās records and information about his methods and suggested further readings. We read drafts of the character summaries and storylines and provided feedback about their historical accuracyā¦I tried not to be too pedantic in my comments, and IĀ knew that [the team at Nyamyam] could disregard my concerns.ā
Working with the games developers, Professor Kassell went on, helped the researchers reflect on āinnovative ways to communicate the history of medicine to both academic and non-academic audiences. Games are great to think with because theyāre made by smart people who are more imaginative, to generalise, than academics.ā
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Professor Kassell said that historians and games developers āboth benefit from collaborations, but the lead should come from the developers. If I wanted to illustrate or disseminate my research, I wouldnāt choose to make a game. Iād write a book.ā
Asked about her advice for other researchers tempted to get involved with games developers, Professor Kassell offered five points for them to bear in mind: āWork with people you like and respect; collaboration means giving up control; be ready to make compromises and meet tight deadlines; offer genuine thanks and praise as much as possible; [and] have a contract so everything is clear, but donāt expect to make any money.ā
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Ā Video games: a winning way to popularise academic research?
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