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Learning games can achieve more with less: a love-letter to simplicity in game design

A lot of people participating in learning experiences are not gamers. Learning game designers often are, and that familiarity can lead us to underestimate how complex our designs might seem to somebody who doesn't, as a rule, play games. Here's what Love Letter does well, how it keeps things simple, and what I think it can teach learning game designers.

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Gamified Healing: A New Frontier in Workers’ Compensation Therapy

This innovative approach leverages games' rewarding and engaging aspects to motivate injured workers to adhere to their therapy regimen. This enhanced engagement through gamification can lead to a more consistent and proactive approach to rehabilitation, potentially accelerating the healing process and improving overall outcomes in workers' compensation cases.

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A Discussion on Tabletop Game Player Aids – Ask The Bellhop

Long time Tabletop Bellhop fan Ryan Peach asks: What are your thoughts on fan-created game aids? Are they table clutter, or do they actually help? Are they better for new players or will veterans also benefit? If you use them, in your experience, which aids or kinds of aids help the most and least? Are there games that you wish had aids, but do not yet? Are there games where you feel they aren't needed? Has a player aid like a rules summary ever replaced a games rulebook for you? Disclosure: Some links in this post are affiliate links.

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“Gamified” exercises revolutionising health and well-being for older people

Key points: Fitness and exercise gamification takes the principles of gaming and applies them to movement routines, transforming them into engaging challenges that help prevent falls and cognitive decline One in three people over the age of 65 living in the community will experience a fall every year Falls are a significant public health issue, contributing to mobility-related disability and loss of independence, and are the second leading cause of unintentional injury deaths worldwide Gone are the days of video games just being for young people.

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Making a Better Monopoly: Or, what games-based learning can learn from a century of game development

If Monopoly is not a good role model for game design, how could modern ideas and developments improve it? What might Monopoly look like if it had been designed today? I'd like to show how we could reconstruct Monopoly as an enjoyable game and also as a learning game - one that families could play over the holidays but that could also teach them a thing or two.

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