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Providing the skills required for innovative mobile game development using industry/academic partnerships.

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Providing the skills required for innovative mobile game development using industry/academic partnerships. / Edwards, Reuben; Coulton, Paul.
In: ITALICS, Vol. 5, No. 3, 10.2006, p. 1-8.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal article

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@article{0240919e93224380883f9fab5dd6bd5f,
title = "Providing the skills required for innovative mobile game development using industry/academic partnerships.",
abstract = "console game developers are struggling to adapt their existing practices to this new medium. This is due to both the physical restrictions of the mobile phone and the mobile network as a development environment and the very different demographic of mobile gamer. They are generally ignoring the inherent features of mobility, almost universal connectivity, context, location, and proximity available on mobile phones and thus the possibilities of creating new game genres. Academia is well-placed to teach the skills required to produce the innovation in mobile games development through burgeoning research in pervasive and mobile computing. However, they must also overcome the prejudices of the game industry which has often criticised academic games courses for failing to give students a true insight into its day to day operation of the industry and in particular the commercial pressures of working to budgets and timescales. In this paper we describe the structure around our MSc in Mobile Game Design and M-Commerce Systems which encourages innovation and entrepreneurship within an academic environment by employing an industrial approach to academic game development through collaborative partnerships with industry and the provision of a direct route to market.",
author = "Reuben Edwards and Paul Coulton",
year = "2006",
month = oct,
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "1--8",
journal = "ITALICS",
issn = "1473-7507",
publisher = "Higher Education Academy",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Providing the skills required for innovative mobile game development using industry/academic partnerships.

AU - Edwards, Reuben

AU - Coulton, Paul

PY - 2006/10

Y1 - 2006/10

N2 - console game developers are struggling to adapt their existing practices to this new medium. This is due to both the physical restrictions of the mobile phone and the mobile network as a development environment and the very different demographic of mobile gamer. They are generally ignoring the inherent features of mobility, almost universal connectivity, context, location, and proximity available on mobile phones and thus the possibilities of creating new game genres. Academia is well-placed to teach the skills required to produce the innovation in mobile games development through burgeoning research in pervasive and mobile computing. However, they must also overcome the prejudices of the game industry which has often criticised academic games courses for failing to give students a true insight into its day to day operation of the industry and in particular the commercial pressures of working to budgets and timescales. In this paper we describe the structure around our MSc in Mobile Game Design and M-Commerce Systems which encourages innovation and entrepreneurship within an academic environment by employing an industrial approach to academic game development through collaborative partnerships with industry and the provision of a direct route to market.

AB - console game developers are struggling to adapt their existing practices to this new medium. This is due to both the physical restrictions of the mobile phone and the mobile network as a development environment and the very different demographic of mobile gamer. They are generally ignoring the inherent features of mobility, almost universal connectivity, context, location, and proximity available on mobile phones and thus the possibilities of creating new game genres. Academia is well-placed to teach the skills required to produce the innovation in mobile games development through burgeoning research in pervasive and mobile computing. However, they must also overcome the prejudices of the game industry which has often criticised academic games courses for failing to give students a true insight into its day to day operation of the industry and in particular the commercial pressures of working to budgets and timescales. In this paper we describe the structure around our MSc in Mobile Game Design and M-Commerce Systems which encourages innovation and entrepreneurship within an academic environment by employing an industrial approach to academic game development through collaborative partnerships with industry and the provision of a direct route to market.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 1

EP - 8

JO - ITALICS

JF - ITALICS

SN - 1473-7507

IS - 3

ER -