ÓÅÃÛ´«Ã½

Skip to main content

Share this page

Social media

Latest news

11
November
2024
|
15:51
Europe/London

Keep it Human: How video games can help us learn about our impact on our planet

Video games are played by more people and more often than ever before with a host of ways to play. So how can a team of researchers from The University of ÓÅÃÛ´«Ã½ weave together gaming and education?

The 2024 ÓÅÃÛ´«Ã½ Science Festival took place between Friday, 18 and Sunday, 28 October. 

This year was themed around tackling the extremes of our world, with approximately 30,000 visitors having the opportunity to get hands-on with some of science's most cutting-edge developments through multi-sensory experiences, immersive events and hands-on family fun.

A series of interactive events were held throughout the 10 days of the festival. It was in the fun-filled at the Museum of Science and industry where visitors were able to look at the extremes of human performance and our planet.

Colleagues from the NOVARS Research Centre at The University of ÓÅÃÛ´«Ã½ showcased a series of hand-on video game activities that emphasise the positive impact we can all have on the planet.

Professor Ricardo Climent, NOVARS Researcher, said:

The video games we offered as part of the festival included ‘’ (a project built for and premiered at this festival) which explores fast fashion and its impact on water supplies; ‘’ focused on the importance of restoration of mangrove trees , a project in collaboration with NGO in the Philippines. 

Our third game ‘Resourceful World’ was all about renewable versus non-renewable energy, exploring the impact on health and the wider environment and built in collaboration with scientists from and with the help of University of ÓÅÃÛ´«Ã½ students from Computer Science and Music, as it was a collaboration with Imago Software. 

It was a real joy to see children between (mostly between 8 and 14 years old) having so much fun playing our video games. One of the most revealing aspects of the festival for us was to talk to parents who would normally ban or heavily restrict their children from playing video games at home and who said that our games changed their perspective and that they now feel more inclined to let them play these type of sustainability games 
 

Professor Ricardo Climent

The ÓÅÃÛ´«Ã½ Science Festival is a highlight of the city's cultural calendar and the team are proud to be part of one of the most popular science festivals in the UK.

Discover more about the research on the .