'Lucid, entertaining and precise... a brilliant warning
about the gamification of everyday life' Tim Clare, Guardian
Is this the game you want to be playing?
Scoring systems are everywhere. Underpinning our daily lives – whether it’s the
fit bits on our wrists, likes on social media, and even school rankings – they
have become pervasive and increasingly dangerous, warping our desires and
outsourcing our values to external institutions. Instead of encouraging us to
be more playful, to take pleasure in the journey of striving towards a goal,
institutions, corporations and bureaucracies weaponize scoring systems to
impose their own interests. No matter what, we always seem to be playing by
someone else’s rules.
In The Score, philosopher C. Thi Nguyen shows us how this newly
‘gamified’ world has fundamentally captured our value systems, turning what
might be moral or personal life choices into numerical data, and forcing us to
prioritise what can be measured and monetized over what is truly meaningful to
us.
A life-long lover of online and board games himself, Nguyen argues that we
should not stop playing games but rather take a step back and become more aware
of their immersive and profound power, so that we might chart a way towards
more creative and joyful lives. To start playing our own game.
About the Author
C. Thi Nguyen is Associate Professor of
Philosophy at the University of Utah, and a specialist in the philosophy of
games, the philosophy of technology, and the theory of value. A former food
writer for the Los Angeles Times, Nguyen is active in public
philosophy, writing for the New York Times, Washington Post, New
Statesman, and elsewhere.