Gaming Rhythms, Game and Counterplay from the the Situated to the Global
Global gaming networks are heterogenous collectives of localized
practices, not unified commercial products. Shifting the analysis of
digital games to local specificities that build and perform the global
and general, Gaming Rhythms employs ethnographic work conducted in
Venezuela and Australia to account for the material experiences of
actual game players. This book explores the materiality of digital play
across diverse locations and argues that the dynamic relation between
the everyday life of the player and the experience of digital game play
can only be understood by examining play-practices in their specific
situations.