"Strandfall is a sci-fi story set in a post-apocalypse, with an emphasis on climate change, co-operation, and adaptation."
I'm in the early stages of designing a world/game focused the same topics, in part because I simply want more stories like this to exist. I live an ocean and a continent away, so of course I won't be participating, but I don't know if I've ever subscribed to a newsletter so quickly. Looks like an absolutely brilliant idea and I hope it's successful!
I'd be extremely interested in participating if a version of this ever came to my corner of the world. Even if it doesn't, just knowing about it is inspiring and motivating :)
Today I learned the Nordic larp style is not the global default. As a Swede who's only ever participated in 2 larps,I hadn't realised people do it differently elsewhere!
I really don't see how leveling and experience points would work in a larp, but then I'm not exactly a experienced larper!
That does immersive art? In the US, it's packaged up as an experience that you can post to Instagram. Meow Wolf would be the first that comes to mind, especially for adults, but there's no shortage of escape rooms. Don't forget the Star Wars experience at Disneyland. Though closed now, the Star Wars hotel experience was probably the best one on the planet.
If you want less corporate, there's Neotropolis, https://www.neotropolis.com/which is a large scale cyberpunk event held in California yearly. Don't forget about Renfaire either.
> Though closed now, the Star Wars hotel experience was probably the best one on the planet.
No. Nope. About the furthest thing from it. Not even the best Disney has done.
This video is 4 hours and somehow was engaging to me (who never went to the Star Wars park) for its entire duration: https://youtu.be/T0CpOYZZZW4
Doing proper immersive experiences where the participants are involved is a ton of work, often without a ton of replay value. This makes them tricky to attract customers to and limits the potential for massive returns, so they are overwhelmingly passion projects.
tldr: I found it fascinating and quite impressive. Definitely flawed, but nowhere near as much as you would think from the four hour video, which is based on a visit from the start of its run.
Only vaguely related: is that tiny receipt printer at the end of the article real or is it itself a mockup? (It appears to be smaller than any of the ones I've come across, and google image search was unhelpful.)
I'm in the early stages of designing a world/game focused the same topics, in part because I simply want more stories like this to exist. I live an ocean and a continent away, so of course I won't be participating, but I don't know if I've ever subscribed to a newsletter so quickly. Looks like an absolutely brilliant idea and I hope it's successful!
I'd be extremely interested in participating if a version of this ever came to my corner of the world. Even if it doesn't, just knowing about it is inspiring and motivating :)
I really don't see how leveling and experience points would work in a larp, but then I'm not exactly a experienced larper!
Are there any orgs like this in the US?
0: https://immersivearts.uk/
If you want less corporate, there's Neotropolis, https://www.neotropolis.com/which is a large scale cyberpunk event held in California yearly. Don't forget about Renfaire either.
No. Nope. About the furthest thing from it. Not even the best Disney has done.
This video is 4 hours and somehow was engaging to me (who never went to the Star Wars park) for its entire duration: https://youtu.be/T0CpOYZZZW4
Doing proper immersive experiences where the participants are involved is a ton of work, often without a ton of replay value. This makes them tricky to attract customers to and limits the potential for massive returns, so they are overwhelmingly passion projects.
https://mssv.net/2023/08/07/star-wars-galactic-starcruiser/
tldr: I found it fascinating and quite impressive. Definitely flawed, but nowhere near as much as you would think from the four hour video, which is based on a visit from the start of its run.
Is it just me or are a disproportionate amount of fictional technologies named after *man
"Smartphones are anti-enchantment devices."
Full disclosure: I am using a smartphone right now.