e65. AR Gaming

(Note: an earlier version of this podcast had an audio problem. It has now been corrected. Please redownload if there is an issue) If we’d asked the question “do you play AR games?” five or ten years ago, we’d have a very different answer than we probably do today. It used to be very much a niche hobby…, if it was even big enough to be considered “niche”. After Pokemon Go was released way back in July 2016 (the old days), AR gaming… at the very least with the game, became incredibly commonplace. Now with Wizards Unite specifically trying to drag in Harry Potter fans, it’s getting to the point the it’s almost safer to assume that a person has played some sort of AR game than it is to assume that they have not. But what is an AR game? Katya, Hannah, and Mav invite AR developer and enthusiast Austin Auclair to join them on today’s show to answer that question and discuss what makes an AR game good or bad, successful or unsuccessful, or even useful or not. Images: Citations and Links: * This episode’s Call for Comments* As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality by Michael Saler * Thank you to Maximilian’s thoughtForm Music for our theme* Follow Austin’s blog at: http://blog.patientrock.com* Follow Hannah on Twitter: @hannahleerogers* Follow Katya on Instagram: @justthatnerdkid * Follow Mav on Twitter: @chrismaverick* Follow Mav’s Personal Blog: http://chrismaverick.com* Follow us on Twitter: @voxpopcast* Follow us on Instagram: @voxpopcast* Follow us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/voxpopcast* Make sure you subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify or wherever podcasts are found and please leave us a review!

Om Podcasten

Vox Populorum is a blog and podcast devoted to pop culture criticism. We believe that the best way to understand culture is to discuss it. But we also believe that it's a lot more fun to have these conversations throwing back a couple beers at the bar rather than in a classroom. Please join our weekly round table of media critics, academics, creators, artists, professors, students and fans for an engaging discussion about movies, novels, comic books, television, video games, music or whatever else we happen to think of! Nec audiendi qui solent dicere, Vox populi, vox Dei, quum tumultuositas vulgi semper insaniae proxima sit.