POSTECH News
Young Game Makers Get Serious about Stretching Their Creativity for More than Fun
Aspiring game developers got together for Global Applied Game Jam 2016 held at POSTECH, South Korea, on Aug 24-26.
More than fifty college students from South Korea, Netherlands, Japan, and China flocked to Pohang, South Korea, to participate in a 48-hour game development challenge hosted by Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH). The event, entitled Global Applied Game Jam 2016, ran for three days from Wednesday August 24th to Friday August 26th in the C5 building on the POSTECH campus.
Within a span of 48 hours, participants were challenged to plan, create, and develop playable applied games that “can help change the world through digital healthcare solutions,” in line with the theme of this year’s contest. Applied games, also known as serious games, are primarily designed for purposes other than pure entertainment. They are often used by industries such as education, health care, and defense to tackle real-world problems and raise social awareness.
The game jam celebrated its fourth year since first given life in 2013 by the Department of Creative IT Engineering (CITE) at POSTECH, one of the top research universities in Asia, to provide a platform for innovative and interdisciplinary engineering education. CITE has been partnering with HKU University of the Arts Utrecht (HKU) in the Netherlands from the beginning for their rich knowledge and experience in game development.
Along with the founding member colleges, POSTECH and HKU, several Korean universities, such as Seoul National University, Korea National University of Arts, and Hongik University, took part. Students from Nihon University of Japan and Jilin Animation Institute of China also joined the challenge for the first time this year.
The young game developers from over ten universities had diverse disciplinary backgrounds in game development-related fields such as game studies, programming, graphic and sound design, and storytelling. They formed a team of five participants to compete through their ideas and game-making skills for 48 straight hours under the coaching of professors and expert developers.
The winner of this year’s Grand Award was Neck_Slice, a team led by CITE student Seungjin Chai. They developed a game called Stretcher that was designed to prevent back and neck disc, a common problem among gamers and heavy computer users caused by bad posture, by encouraging a stretching habit.
Including Neck_Slice, there are five winning teams – one Grand prize, two Excellent prizes, and one each of the Creative and Convergence prizes. In addition to awards and prizes, the winning teams are offered free consulting services for business development. Those winners who are CITE students will also be sponsored to participate in a game contest to be held in the Netherlands this coming December.