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Jane McGonigal on Productivity
Sunday 24 October, Conway Hall, London Collectively, the human population spends 3 billion hours a week playing computer and videogames. Is this a colossal waste of human resources - or, in those 3 billion hours a week, are we actually being extraordinarily productive? Jane McGonigal will take to our pulpit to challenge our assumptions about games as ways to "pass" or "waste" our time - and argue instead that we are never more productive than when we are immersed in a good game. What, exactly, do we produce when we play a good game? Positive emotions - like optimism, curiosity and wonder; collective intelligence; and a stronger social fabric. In this sermon, Jane will urge all of us to become more productive of what really matters in life - happiness, resilience, and meaning -- by spending more of our time playing bigger and better games. Jane McGonigal is a game designer based in San Francisco, California. She is the director of game research and development at the Institute for the Future and author of Reality Is Broken: Why Games Make Us Better and How They Can Change the World. |
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