• Can two worlds bleed? How live action role-play affects your life

    From kyonshi@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 20 10:44:42 2023
    XPost: alt.games.frp.live-action

    https://www.sydney.edu.au/news-opinion/news/2022/06/22/can-two-worlds-bleed-how-live-action-role-play-affects-your-life-larp.html


    Can two worlds bleed? How live action role-play affects your life
    22 June 2022
    LARPing has more intense effect than other entertainment
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    New research from the Business School has found people can experience
    traces of extraordinary events bleeding into their daily life. This is
    common for people who engage in live action role-playing games.

    In season four of Netflix series Stranger Things, alternate dimension
    ‘the Upside Down’ bleeds into the real world. Now new research by the University of Sydney and Monash University has found this is a common experience for people who engage in live action role-playing games.

    Live action role-playing (or LARPing) involves playing a fictional
    character to complete goals with other characters in the real world. Participants can spend months preparing for the LARP, creating elaborate costumes and assuming their character’s persona online, before embarking
    on the weekend-long event to take on challenges and quests in person –
    often in an elaborately-designed venue.

    New research has found that these immersive experiences may be difficult
    to come out of as participants experience a clash with their everyday
    lives – sometimes with life-altering consequences.
    The study, published in the prestigious Journal of Consumer Research,
    found most participants experienced ‘bleed’; a term coined by people
    within the LARPing community to describe the traces their extraordinary experiences leave in their everyday lives.

    For most, those traces are innocuous, such as continuing to wear
    elements of their character’s outfit and consuming related media in an
    effort to recapture the feeling of doing the LARP. But for some the
    experiences brought about intense emotional and personal realisations
    that led to long-term changes in their work and relationships.

    “The LARP and my bleed set in motion some processes that led to me
    stepping out of harmful and abusive structures a year later, in my real life,” said Theresa*, 36.

    “Because the topics of Conscience [the LARP] spoke to me on a very
    personal level and made me think about repeating stories versus breaking
    free, about the nature of freedom, about who I want to be.”

    The findings have consequences for how LARP designers protect
    participants, but also how we think about the growing market for experience-based consumption including virtual reality, augmented
    reality and the metaverse.


    Four levels of bleed


    Study authors, Associate Professor Tom van Laer from the University of
    Sydney and Dr Davide Orazi from Monash University, began their research
    with archival data from three different LARPs, followed by an
    ethnographic study at four LARPS where they collected 52 pages of field
    notes, 2,496 photographs, four hours of GoPro videos, 29 interviews,
    seven diaries and 2,936 screen captures.

    What they found in follow-up interviews was a “very mixed bag” of
    reactions to the experience, according to co-author Tom van Laer,
    Associate Professor of Narratology, University of Sydney Business School.

    “From breaking off relationships, to deciding to raise their children in
    a different way – or even falling in love with somebody in the LARP,
    which basically means falling in love with a character – our
    participants reported a wide range of responses,” said Associate
    Professor van Laer.

    The researchers categorised the traces left by the LARPs into four trajectories:

    Absent: returning can cause little to no bleed when consumers do
    not sufficiently engage with the extraordinary frames and roles.
    Compensatory: the experience leaves a trace without creating
    tension; as these consumers become nostalgic for the extraordinary
    experience, they look to evoke the experience once more for example
    through novels, TV series and video games.
    Cathartic: the experience creates tension with daily life and one
    or more aspects of consumers’ everyday existence is called into
    question, and compensatory consumption alone is not enough to stop the
    intense bleed; consumers instead reflect on, report, and share the extraordinary experience to cope with bleed.
    Delayed: in few cases bleed is so intense it requires prolonged
    distancing from anything related to the extraordinary experience.

    Why so serious?
    Associate Professor van Laer said their research demonstrated there are
    three main reasons LARPing leaves a stronger impact than heavy
    engagement with traditional media or tabletop gaming.

    “When you watch TV, vision and sound are basically the only two senses
    that play a role. In a LARP there’s touch and smell and taste, so all
    your senses are there. It's not just in your head, it's everywhere,
    there’s no border from reality.

    “LARPs also allow more freedom and agency than is possible with
    traditional media and tabletop games. Rather than the show runner, game designer or dungeon master ‘writing the book’, LARPs give consumers a
    lot of involvement in creating the story.

    “And finally, you know you can stop a movie. If people get too scared,
    you stop it. You cannot stop the LARP because the social pressure to be
    there is the same as the social pressure of a meeting at work – you
    can’t just stop if you’re not liking it.”

    Consequences for the metaverse

    Two worlds bleed. People can find it difficult to return to the real
    world after being immersed in fantasy. Photo: Adobe

    Associate Professor van Laer stresses that many of the impacts of
    LARPing are positive – people develop new skills, improve their
    confidence and tap into a well of agency and creativity that may benefit
    other areas of their lives.

    But he also believes the rare but serious consequences have
    repercussions for how we design LARPs and other related experiences.

    “Immersive and extraordinary experiences are becoming super popular
    since COVID. I mean, lock the whole world up for a couple of years and
    that's what we're craving for – but we're not used to that level of intensity.

    “So there is a responsibility on the part of the designers to realise
    what they might be doing and the effects they might be having.”

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