cross-postowane z: https://szmer.info/post/2233040

Stanisław Krawczyk:

Michał Mochocki, myself, and Aleksandra Mochocka have published a paper in the journal “Games and Culture”. The paper’s title is “Polish History up to 1795 in Polish Games and Game Studies”.

Link to the full version (paywalled): https://doi.org/10.1177/15554120241228490

Link to the version before final proofs and typesetting (free): http://stanislawkrawczyk.pl/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Polish-History-up-to-1795-in-Polish-Games-and-Game-Studies-Accepted-Version.pdf

Abstract in the attached image (alt text).

Polish History up to 1795 in Polish Games and Game Studies

Michał Mochocki, Stanisław Krawczyk, and Aleksandra Mochocka

Abstract

Situated within historical and regional (CEE) game studies, this article is an overview of games made in Poland after 1989 about Polish history up to the eighteenth century. It also outlines research made on those games, and it comments on changing cultural and political factors shaping the development of Polish history/heritage-themed games over the last three decades. We group the games in thematic-chronological categories: early medieval Slavic settings up to 1000, medieval to Renaissance Poland, and Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569–1795. Main findings: (a) Slavic fantasy became very popular with game developers after Witcher 3, but it has received little scholarly attention beside the witcher series. (b) Medieval Polish monarchies have barely caught the eye of game developers, which translates to the absence of related research. © The PLC period is well-represented in digital and nondigital games, and well-researched in historical games studies by Polish scholars in Polish and English.