Anyway, about the word "gameplay." Who likes it, and who wants to see it go?
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--Carrying on.
BurningDoom wrote:I see what you're saying, what you're describing is an active imagination...You actually have to use critical thinking skills and react to what's going on in a game, which you don't do in a book or movie.
-You saw what I was saying, and then misinterpreted it.
I am going to uselessly summarize part of the process of reading.
-You don't need critical thinking skills to read books? What kind of books are you into?
-I'm describing the process of reading. This happens when reading the dryest of nonfiction.
BurningDoom wrote:...but an active imagination is far different from the way you actually interact with a game and input commands. Books and movies are the same story every time, whether you have an active imagination or not. But with a video game, the input you give the game changes the what's happening on the screen.
KDub wrote:That book will always tell the same story and if you stand up and dance the entire movie it will still be the same movie, it does not react to you at all.
Thank you for that information, but it's futile explaining books to someone who's already learned to read.
Hobie-wan wrote:You react to the visuals and sounds, manipulate the controls, and the game reacts to that, and so on. That is interaction.
Agreed.
Dictionary.com wrote:1.
acting one upon or with the other.
I like this definition too. Two-way communication isn't necessary for interaction to take place.
Can't argue with a definition from some random general-purpose dictionary on the internet, can I?
Wikipedia 8-28-2013 - 'Reading (process) wrote:Reading is a complex cognitive process of decoding symbols in order to construct or derive meaning (reading comprehension). It is a means of language acquisition, of communication, and of sharing information and ideas. Like all language, it is a complex interaction between the text and the reader which is shaped by the reader’s prior knowledge, experiences, attitude, and language community which is culturally and socially situated. The reading process requires continuous practice, development, and refinement.