-
Initial Review of The Gamers: The Shadow Menace
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
blog posting
This is an initial review, with just my first impressions upon the first viewing of the brand new offering in the original The Gamers Series: The Shadow Menace. I attempt to avoid any overt spoilers by keeping this review more abstract rather than specific.
Located in
Blog
-
Notes from experiments on RPG optimization - Maximizing enjoyment, benefit, immersion, flow, safety, etc.
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
Full Text,
hawke robinson,
correlative research,
Gender Bias,
Case study(ies),
Potential RPG Research Question,
Effects of RPG,
anecdote,
FAQs / Frequently Asked Questions,
Analysis,
research,
Biofeedback, Neurofeedback, EEG,
absorption,
blog posting,
RPG Research Essay,
RPG Research Project Updates,
causal study(ies)
Here is a summary of many observations I have made over the decades through various experiments in trying to optimize the RPG experience. This is from a huge pile of hundreds of documents I have written, spanning over 15+ years of research (and nearly 40 years of RPG experience). It will likely take me a year or more to finish integrating all that information into this document. All of the placeholder topics I currently have documents to fill in the blanks, but I time is the challenge in doing so. Bit by bit I am uploading all that content to here.
Located in
Blog
-
Should Game Masters for Role-Playing Games be Paid? It Depends.
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
blog posting
Increasingly heated debate has been growing in recent years about whether role-playing game masters (RPG GMs) should be paid or not. It depends... NOTE: This article focuses on pure entertainment RPG Professionals, not RPG Professionals in educational or therapeutic settings. To be clear, this is a blog posting, as an opinion piece, not a formal essay or research paper. For more formal essays, see the research sections of the site. This informal article is from the first-person experiential perspective, that attempts to include persuasive argument components, as someone involved with RPGs since the 1970s running many sessions per week, and paid as a GM (when desired) since the 1980s.
Located in
Blog
-
Professional Ethics, Friendly vs. Friends
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
blog posting,
Research Question / Discussion Topic
This came up in an Alignable social network thread, and I thought others might enjoy it being shared here. "What do you think is an appropriate relationship with a client/customer? " This also addresses some of the topics of RPG Professionals / Paid Game Masters, etc.
Located in
Blog
-
Interdisciplinary RPG Therapeutics
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Jun 20, 2015
—
last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
—
filed under:
Discipline: RPGT (Role-Playing Game Therapy),
TBI - Traumatic Brain Injury,
Effects of RPG,
therapeutic recreation,
Brain Injury (Stroke, TBI, etc.),
therapeutic rpg,
therapeutic role-playing game,
rpg for therapy,
recreation therapy,
blog posting,
recreational therapy,
Role-Playing Gaming Therapeutic Recreation Handbook of Practice,
Discipline: TR/RT
While listening to some research on neurological music therapy program descriptions, I was struck by the overlap of the RPG Therapy programs as a very interdisciplinary delivery of services...
Located in
Blog
-
Christian Gamers Guild FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions by Christians about Role-playing Games
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
May 10, 2013
—
last modified
May 08, 2023 08:10 AM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Others' research,
Diagnosis: Depression,
Christians & RPG,
stereotype propagation
Cached from their website. Not affiliated with RPG Research in any way..."If you are Christian and concerned about Dungeons & Dragons (D&D), or other role-playing games, here is a very useful FAQ from the Christian Gamers Guild that will help address all your concerns. "
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
/
Archives
-
1988 - Therapy is fantasy: role-playing, healing, and the construction of symbolic order.
-
by
Hawke Robinson
—
published
Nov 19, 2012
—
last modified
Nov 05, 2023 10:27 AM
—
filed under:
archived article,
Others' research,
Anthroplogical/anthropology,
Case study(ies),
Potential RPG Research Question,
Effects of RPG,
correlative research,
sociological / sociology,
Diagnosis: Depression,
anecdote,
TODO,
Material to read
Hughes, John (1988). Therapy is fantasy: role-playing, healing, and the construction of symbolic order.
Australian National University honors paper in medical anthropology on the use of RPG in the self-treatment of clinical depression. 23 pages.
Located in
Archives
/
…
/
1. Primary List of Documents for Research on RPGs (Others' Research)
/
Archives