Understanding game data work

被引:0
|
作者
Tyni, Heikki [1 ]
Sotamaa, Olli [1 ]
Myohanen, Taina [1 ]
机构
[1] Tampere Univ, Fac Informat Technol & Commun Sci, Kanslerinrinne 1, Tampere 33014, Finland
来源
BIG DATA & SOCIETY | 2025年 / 12卷 / 01期
关键词
Data work; datafication; game industry; game production; creative industries; professions and occupations; POWER;
D O I
10.1177/20539517241309892
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
The game industry's content production, maintenance of live games, and processes of acquiring production funding increasingly rely on various kinds of data and its rigorous analysis. These new needs and functions have generated emerging forms of work, such as those of the data analyst, data engineer, and data scientist. Through in-depth interviews with 20 Finnish game industry professionals and an analysis of game industry job advertisements, this paper examines the work and identity of game industry data workers. Drawing from scholarship focused on game production, game work, and data labour, this article argues that organisational practices surrounding data professionals reveal the centrality of high-level data work in game studios focused on live service games and that data work is now performed not just by data analysts, but by the entire staff and management. As a precursor to the wider creative industries, we argue that creative work and data work in game companies are gradually converging, due to the datafied work environment facilitating datafied game work and the work of data professionals increasingly intertwining with creative tasks. Complicating the previous game studio hierarchy is the data analyst's dual role as both a subservient support function and a central broker of data. Adding nuance to this, the article argues that an important aspect of the work of bespoke data professionals in game companies is communication, in contrast to the high-level quantitative tasks often associated with analysis.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] UNDERSTANDING THE FUNDING GAME: THE TEXTUAL COORDINATION OF CIVIL SECTOR WORK
    Nichols, Naomi
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY-CAHIERS CANADIENS DE SOCIOLOGIE, 2008, 33 (01): : 61 - 87
  • [2] The Inapplicability of Objectivity: Understanding the Work of Data Journalism*
    Tong, Jingrong
    Zuo, Landong
    JOURNALISM PRACTICE, 2021, 15 (02) : 153 - 169
  • [3] Are They All Data? Understanding the Work of Organizational Knowledge
    Thompson, Teri L.
    Warren, Judith J.
    CLINICAL NURSE SPECIALIST, 2009, 23 (04) : 185 - 186
  • [4] Work-in-Progress-AR-supported Collaborative Game for Understanding Complex Systems
    Su, Man
    2021 7TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IMMERSIVE LEARNING RESEARCH NETWORK (ILRN), 2021, : 93 - 95
  • [5] Work is Not a Game
    Spencer, Robin W.
    RESEARCH-TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT, 2013, 56 (06) : 59 - 60
  • [6] Missing: Understanding the Reception of a Serious Game by Analyzing App Store Data
    Toftedahl, Marcus
    Backlund, Per
    Engstrom, Henrik
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SERIOUS GAMES, 2018, 5 (04): : 3 - 22
  • [7] Open data work: understanding open data usage from a practice lens
    Ruijer, Erna
    Grimmelikhuijsen, Stephan
    van den Berg, Jochem
    Meijer, Albert
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCES, 2020, 86 (01) : 3 - 19
  • [8] Understanding the protection game
    Kellett, Andrew
    Engineering Management, 2004, 14 (06): : 12 - 13
  • [9] Understanding the "numbers game"
    Bird, Andrew
    Karolyi, Stephen A.
    Ruchti, Thomas G.
    JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS, 2019, 68 (2-3):
  • [10] Understanding the Circle Game
    Eckert, Steven E.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ORAL & MAXILLOFACIAL IMPLANTS, 2020, 35 (05) : 873 - 873