6533b851fe1ef96bd12a8e65

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Morality in Let’s Play narrations : Moral evaluations of Gothic monsters in gameplay videos of Fallout 3

Sari Piittinen

subject

Sociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectvideopelitdigital gamesmonsters050801 communication & media studiesPerformative utterancepelikulttuuri0508 media and communicationsgothicgotiikkata616Sociologyhirviötmedia_common060201 languages & linguisticsCommunicationgameplay05 social sciencesvideo games06 humanities and the artsmoralityMoralityverkkovideotCyberculturelet’s playmoraaliFeature (computer vision)Aesthetics0602 languages and literatureetiikkadigitaaliset pelitgaming culture

description

Performative Let’s Play gaming videos are a part of contemporary Internet culture through which morality becomes shared. Many digital games draw on Gothic traditions to feature human-like monsters who demand morally complex interpretations from players. This study examines what kinds of moral evaluations players form of ambiguous Gothic monsters in Let’s Play videos of the action role-playing game Fallout 3. With a discourse analysis of transcribed speech obtained from 20 Let’s Play series on YouTube, it argues that the moral evaluations that players actively produce impact significantly on the play experience, that players take diverse moral stances whose (in)determinacy varies based on what players assume of their audience, and that players are morally autonomous by not hesitating to disagree with the game designers’ moral ruling. Complex Gothic monsters function effectively as catalysts for the moral evaluations that can involve expressions of suspicion, sympathy for the underdog, begrudging acceptance, and betrayal.

10.1177/1461444818779754http://juuli.fi/Record/0334987218