How can people struggling with disabilities get ahead? When companies hire them for their skills, not just to fill a quota. This piece looks at where that鈥檚 beginning to happen.聽聽
Even if your own video-gaming days date back to Atari Pong, you鈥檝e surely noticed the entertainment art鈥檚 halting evolution 鈥 and its see-sawing reputation.
Along the way to fueling big-money 鈥渆sports,鈥 gaming has reflected some real social ugliness 鈥 the blatant misogyny of Grand Theft Auto, the sociopolitical violence of .
It has also showcased efforts to teach complex systems (Sims) and even to promote physical activity (sports games for Wii). Today social media and even staid magazines buzz with , the deeply immersive diversion of the moment.
Gaming is too nuanced to deserve binary views, but extremes stand out. This week brought news of a recruitment campaign by the British Army that about young gamers to military skills.
But also in the news: , an independent game designer. One of his offerings, Flower, was enshrined in the Smithsonian in 2013. (Its players inhabit the wind and affect environmental change.)
His next act: Sky. It鈥檚 a phone-app-based game 鈥渁bout 鈥榮preading light,鈥 鈥 writes Quartz鈥檚 Ephrat Livni. For its players, 鈥 鈥榞enerosity and compassion [are] key鈥 to finding their way.鈥
Can the thinking that Chen鈥檚 art reflects seep into the gaming culture 鈥 and the broader culture? 鈥淚 realized the only winning condition is to do something that isn鈥檛 about you,鈥 ;聽鈥測ou can win when you focus on change.鈥
Now to our five stories for your Friday.聽