
An alternate reality game (ARG) is an interactive
networked narrative that uses the real world as a platform and employs
transmedia storytelling
Transmedia storytelling (also known as transmedia narrative or multiplatform storytelling) is the technique of adapting a single story or story experience across multiple platforms and formats using current digital technologies.
From a product ...
to deliver a story that may be altered by players' ideas or actions.
The form is defined by intense player involvement with a story that takes place in real time and evolves according to players' responses. It is shaped by characters that are actively controlled by the game's designers, as opposed to being controlled by an
AI as in a computer or console video game. Players interact directly with characters in the game, solve plot-based challenges and puzzles, and collaborate as a community to analyze the story and coordinate real-life, online activities and AI. ARGs generally utilize
multimedia
Multimedia is a form of communication that uses a combination of different content forms, such as Text (literary theory), writing, Sound, audio, images, animations, or video, into a single presentation. T ...
, such as telephones and mail, but rely on the Internet as the central binding medium.
ARGs tend to be free to play, with costs absorbed either through supporting products (e.g., collectible puzzle cards fund
Perplex City) or through promotional relationships with existing products (for example, ''
I Love Bees'' was a promotion for ''
Halo 2
''Halo 2'' is a 2004 first-person shooter video game developed by Bungie and published by Microsoft Game Studios for the Xbox console. ''Halo 2'' is the second installment in the ''Halo'' franchise and the sequel to 2001's critically acclai ...
'', and the ''
Lost Experience'' and ''
Find 815'' promoted the television show ''
Lost''). Pay-to-play models exist as well. Later games in the genre have shown an increasing amount of experimentation with new models and sub-genres.
Definition
There is a great deal of debate surrounding the characteristics by which the term "alternate reality game" should be defined. Sean Stacey, the founder of the website Unfiction, has suggested that the best way to define the genre was ''not'' to define it, and instead locate each game on three axes (ruleset, authorship and coherence) in a sphere of "chaotic fiction" that would include works such as the
Uncyclopedia and street games like
SF0 as well.
Several experts, though, point to the use of transmedia, "the aggregate effect of multiple texts/media artifacts,"
as the defining attribute of ARGs. This prompts the unique collaboration emanating from ARGs as well;
Sean Stewart
Sean Stewart (born June 2, 1965) is an American-Canadian science fiction and fantasy author.
Biography
Born in Lubbock, Texas, Sean Stewart moved to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada in 1968. After stints in Houston, Texas, Vancouver, British Colum ...
, founder of
42 Entertainment
42 Entertainment is an American company based in Burbank which specializes in creating and producing alternate reality games (ARGs). The company was founded in 2003 as an independently owned, creative content and interactive agency under the na ...
, which has produced various successful ARGs, speaks to how this occurs, noting that "the key thing about an ARG is the way it jumps off of all those platforms. It's a game that's social and comes at you across all the different ways that you connect to the world around you."
Most ARGs do not have any fixed rules—players discover the rules and the boundaries of the game through trial and error—and do not require players to assume fictional identities or roleplay beyond feigning belief in the reality of the characters they interact with (even if games where players play 'themselves' are a long-standing variant on the genre).
Scholarly views
Overall, academics have been intrigued by ARGs' potential for effective organizing. Across the board, a diverse range of organizations, such as businesses, nonprofits, government agencies, and schools "can learn from the best practices and lessons of ARGs to similarly take advantage of new media and collective problem–solving".
As such, implementation of ARGs in these different settings involves finding best practices for honing the collaborative, transmedia elements of ARGs for these respective institutions.
Much of this scholarly interest stems from the evolving media ecology with the rise of new media. In sustaining cooperative online communities, ARGs build on "an alignment of interest, where problems are presented in a fashion that assists game designers in their goal while intriguing and aiding players in their goals".
This returns to ARGs' framework of transmedia storytelling, which necessitates that ARG designers relinquish a significant degree of their power to the ARG's audience, problematizing traditional views of authorship.
The majority of the scholarly review on ARGs analyzes their pedagogical advantages. Notably, in the classroom, ARGs can be effective tools for providing exigence on given topics and yield a
collaborative
Collaboration (from Latin ''com-'' "with" + ''laborare'' "to labor", "to work") is the process of two or more people, entities or organizations working together to complete a task or achieve a goal. Collaboration is similar to cooperation. The f ...
and
experiential learning
Experiential learning (ExL) is the process of learning through experience, and is more narrowly defined as "learning through reflection on doing". Hands-on learning can be a form of experiential learning, but does not necessarily involve students ...
environment.
By the same token, weaknesses of classroom learning through ARGs include the need for a flexible narrative conducive to collaborative learning in large groups and a sophisticated web design.
In a contribution to a volume focusing on play and cities in Springer's ''Gaming Media and Social Effects'' series,
Eddie Duggan
Eddie Duggan is a British photographer, film-maker, screenwriter, author and academic games historian.
Photography
Eddie Duggan's photographs of bands on the burgeoning music scene in 1970s London have been published in both the underground and ...
(2017) provides an overview of pervasive games, and discusses characteristics in ARGs, LARPs, RPGs, assassination games and other games where the notion of the "magic circle" as elaborated by Salen and Zimmerman is confounded.
Development and history
Early examples
''
Ong's Hat
Ong's Hat is one of the earliest Internet-based secret history conspiracy theory, conspiracy theories. It was created as a piece of collaborative fiction by four core individuals, dating back to the 1980s, although the membership propagating the ...
/ Incunabula'' was most likely started sometime around 1993, and also included most of the aforementioned design principles. ''Ong's Hat'' also incorporated elements of
legend tripping into its design, as chronicled in a scholarly work titled "Legend-Tripping Online: Supernatural Folklore and the Search for Ong's Hat". Some scholars disagree on the classification of the ''Ong's Hat'' story.
In 1997, a year prior to the release of
Douglas Adams
Douglas Noel Adams (11 March 1952 – 11 May 2001) was an English author, humorist, and screenwriter, best known as the creator of ''The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy''. Originally a 1978 BBC radio comedy, ''The Hitchhiker's Guide to the ...
' computer game ''
Starship Titanic'',
The Digital Village launched a website purporting to be that of an intergalactic travel agency called Starlight Travel, which in the game is the Starship Titanic's parent company. The site combined copious amounts of
Monty Python
Monty Python, also known as the Pythons, were a British comedy troupe formed in 1969 consisting of Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones and Michael Palin. The group came to prominence for the sketch comedy ser ...
-esque writing (by
Michael Bywater) with
ARG-type interactivity.
''The Beast''
In 2001, in order to market the movie ''
A.I. Artificial Intelligence'' directed by
Steven Spielberg
Steven Allan Spielberg ( ; born December 18, 1946) is an American filmmaker. A major figure of the New Hollywood era and pioneer of the modern blockbuster, Spielberg is widely regarded as one of the greatest film directors of all time and is ...
that finished
Stanley Kubrick
Stanley Kubrick (; July 26, 1928 – March 7, 1999) was an American filmmaker and photographer. Widely considered one of the greatest filmmakers of all time, Stanley Kubrick filmography, his films were nearly all adaptations of novels or sho ...
's unfinished project to adapt
Brian Aldiss
Brian Wilson Aldiss (; 18 August 1925 – 19 August 2017) was an English writer, artist and anthology editor, best known for science fiction novels and short stories. His byline reads either Brian W. Aldiss or simply Brian Aldiss, except for oc ...
's short story "
Supertoys Last All Summer Long", and also a planned series of
Microsoft computer games based on the film, Microsoft's Creative Director
Jordan Weisman and another Microsoft game designer,
Elan Lee, conceived of an elaborate murder mystery played out across hundreds of websites, email messages, faxes, fake ads, and voicemail messages. They hired
Sean Stewart
Sean Stewart (born June 2, 1965) is an American-Canadian science fiction and fantasy author.
Biography
Born in Lubbock, Texas, Sean Stewart moved to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada in 1968. After stints in Houston, Texas, Vancouver, British Colum ...
, an award-winning science fiction/
fantasy
Fantasy is a genre of speculative fiction that involves supernatural or Magic (supernatural), magical elements, often including Fictional universe, imaginary places and Legendary creature, creatures.
The genre's roots lie in oral traditions, ...
author, to write the story and
Pete Fenlon, an experienced adventure game "
worldbuilder", to serve as developer and content lead. The game, dubbed "the Citizen Kane of online entertainment" by
Internet Life,
was a runaway success that involved over three million active participants from all over the world during its run and would become the seminal example of the nascent ARG genre.
An early asset list for the project contained 666 files, prompting the game's puppet-masters to dub it "
the Beast", a name which was later adopted by players. A large and extremely active fan community called the Cloudmakers formed to analyze and participate in solving the game, and the combined intellect, tenacity and engagement of the group soon forced the puppet-masters to create new subplots, devise new puzzles, and alter elements of the design to keep ahead of the player base. Somewhat unusual for a computer-based game, the production drew players from a wide spectrum of age groups and backgrounds.
Although the Beast ran for only three months, it prompted the formation of a highly organized and intensely engaged community that remained active
years after the game concluded. Perhaps more significantly, it inspired a number of its participants to create games adapting and expanding the model, extending it from an anomalous one-time occurrence to a new genre of entertainment and allowing the community to grow even after the Beast itself concluded. Members of the Cloudmakers group went on to form ARGN, the primary news source for the genre, and Unfiction, its central community hub, as well as designing the first successful and widely played indie ARGs, such as LockJaw and Metacortechs, and corporate efforts such as Perplex City.
''Portal'' (video game franchise)
On March 1 and March 3 of 2010,
Portal was updated to include a promotional ARG for its then-upcoming sequel,
Portal 2. It was created by the ''Portal 2'' development team, and while it was mostly made to discover the next entry in the ''Portal'' franchise, it also included a way to extend the ''Portal'' universe. ''Portal'' was updated at 2:33 PST, with the update's description reading "Changed radio transmission frequency to comply with federal and state spectrum management regulations". The update also added a single achievement, named "Transmission Received". The update added 26 portable radios placed throughout the game's levels, which played a default song until placed in a specific location in their respective maps. When placed in their location, the radio's lights changed from red to green, and they began to emit a string of
Morse code
Morse code is a telecommunications method which Character encoding, encodes Written language, text characters as standardized sequences of two different signal durations, called ''dots'' and ''dashes'', or ''dits'' and ''dahs''. Morse code i ...
, which revealed hidden images when decoded with
Robot 36. The numbers from the images form the
BBS phone number "(425) 822-5251" and when you dial into the BBS it will prompt the user asking for a login. Entering the username "backup" and the password "backup" (from the 12th audio file) will show text saying "Aperture Laboratories GLaDOS v3.11", followed by "Copyright (c) 1973–1997 Aperture – All Rights Reserved" then will proceed to show the user
ASCII art
ASCII art is a graphic design technique that uses computers for presentation and consists of pictures pieced together from the 95 printable (from a total of 128) character (computing), characters defined by the ASCII Standard from 1963 and ASCI ...
images and paragraphs quoting
Cave Johnson. If the person is idle for 4 minutes, the following text will say "Hey! Please login now. You have one minute left." and if left idle for one more minute the next text will say "Your login time (5 minutes) ran out. Goodbye", disconnecting the user.
''Portal'' was updated again on March 3, 2010, at 2:24 PST with the description "Added valuable asset retrieval", The game ending was
retcon
Retroactive continuity, or retcon for short, is a literary device in fictional story telling whereby facts and events established through the narrative itself are adjusted, ignored, supplemented, or contradicted by a subsequently published work ...
ned to add the Party Escort bot, who dragged the player back into the enrichment center rather than allowing them to escape, setting up the events of ''Portal 2''.
Community and genre growth
Influenced heavily by the Beast and enthusiastic about the power of collaboration, several
Cloudmakers came together with the idea that they could create a similar game. The first effort to make an independent Beast-like game, ''Ravenwatchers'', failed, but another team soon assembled and met with greater success. With very little experience behind them, the group managed, after nine months of development, to create a viable game that was soon seized upon eagerly by the Cloudmakers group and featured in ''
Wired
Wired may refer to:
Arts, entertainment, and media Music
* ''Wired'' (Jeff Beck album), 1976
* ''Wired'' (Hugh Cornwell album), 1993
* ''Wired'' (Mallory Knox album), 2017
* "Wired", a song by Prism from their album '' Beat Street''
* "Wired ...
'' magazine.
Gathering worldwide gamers
Because of their similarities, video games and ARGs continued to be associated through many projects, In 2009,
Funcom
Funcom Oslo AS (formerly Funcom N.V. and Funcom Productions AS) is a Norwegian video game developer and publisher that specializes in online games. It is best known for the massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) titles ''Conan Ex ...
, a game development studio from
Oslo
Oslo ( or ; ) is the capital and most populous city of Norway. It constitutes both a county and a municipality. The municipality of Oslo had a population of in 2022, while the city's greater urban area had a population of 1,064,235 in 2022 ...
, Norway, hid a gate on its corporate website, which led to an ARG which would be part of the pre-launch campaign for ''
The Secret World'', a game released in 2013. The gate was discovered only in 2013, therefore requiring the puppet-master to adapt the scenario to its actual setting.
Funcom has done a total of 16 ARGs that tie in with ''The Secret World'', with the first one starting in May 2007. The ARGs focussed on several different storylines, such as: The Expedition of Roald Amundsen, The Sanctuary of Secrets and the Secret War.
The company behind Funcom's last 2 ARGs, Human Equation, a Montreal-based entertainment studio who also created an independent ARG called ''Qadhos'', has even further purchased the rights to a special class of characters, The Black Watchmen, to create their own independent ARG. A spin-off of Human Equation,
Alice & Smith, released the game in June 2015.
In 2015,
Michael Wisner created the YouTube web series ''Soursalt'', which was an account with 600 subscribers that no one had any recollection of seemingly interacting with. This ARG focused on portraying the mythos surrounding the This Man, from the
since cancelled promotional campaign. Notably, he had also created the YouTube
found footage adjacent series HooH, which is a series revolving around an organization dedicated to containing paranormal entities, befitting to the style of the
SCP Foundation
The SCP Foundation is a fictional organization featured in stories created by contributors on the SCP Wiki, a wiki-based Collaborative fiction, collaborative writing project. Within the project's shared universe, shared fictional universe, the ...
, albeit in a filmic format instead.
Massive-scale commercial games and mainstream attention
After the success of the first major entries in the nascent ARG genre, a number of large corporations looked to ARGs to both promote their products, and to enhance their companies' images by demonstrating their interest in innovative and fan-friendly marketing methods. To create buzz for the launch of the Xbox game ''Halo 2'', Microsoft hired the team that had created the Beast, now operating independently as
42 Entertainment
42 Entertainment is an American company based in Burbank which specializes in creating and producing alternate reality games (ARGs). The company was founded in 2003 as an independently owned, creative content and interactive agency under the na ...
. The result, ''
I Love Bees'', departed radically from the website-hunting and puzzle-solving that had been the focus of the Beast. ''I Love Bees'' wove together an interactive narrative set in 2004, and a ''War of the Worlds''-style radio drama set in the future, the latter of which was broken into 30–60-second segments and broadcast over ringing payphones worldwide.
The game pushed players outdoors to answer phones, create and submit content, and recruit others, and received as much or a more mainstream notice than its predecessor, finding its way onto television during a presidential debate, and becoming one of ''The New York Times'' catchphrases of 2004.
As such, ''
I Love Bees'' captivated enough fans to garner significant press attention, and partly because of this publicity, ''Halo 2'' "sold $125 million in copies the first day of release." A slew of imitators fan tributes and parodies
followed. In 2005, a pair of articles profiling 42 Entertainment appeared in ''
Game Developer'' magazine and the
East Bay Express, both of which tied into an ARG created by the journalist and his editors.
The following spring, Audi launched ''
The Art of the Heist'', developed by Audi ad agency McKinney+Silver, Haxan Films (creators of ''
The Blair Witch Project
''The Blair Witch Project'' is a 1999 American psychological horror film written, directed, and edited by Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez. One of the most successful independent films of all time, it is a " found footage" pseudo-docume ...
''), to promote its new A3.
Roughly a year after ''I Love Bees'', 42 Entertainment produced ''Last Call Poker,'' a promotion for Activision's video game ''Gun''. Designed to help modern audiences connect with the Western genre, ''Last Call Poker'' centered on a working poker site, held games of "Tombstone Hold 'Em" in cemeteries around the United States—as well as in at least one digital venue, ''
World of Warcraft
''World of Warcraft'' (''WoW'') is a 2004 massively multiplayer online role-playing (MMORPG) video game developed and published by Blizzard Entertainment for Windows and Mac OS X. Set in the '' Warcraft'' fantasy universe, ''World of War ...
''s own virtual reality cemetery – and sent players to their own local cemeteries to clean up neglected grave sites and perform other tasks.
At the end of 2005, the International Game Developers Association ARG Special Interest Group was formed "to bring together those already designing, building, and running ARGs, in order to share knowledge, experience, and ideas for the future." More recently, an ARG was created by
THQ for the game ''
Frontlines: Fuel of War'' around peak oil theories where the world is in a crisis over diminishing oil resources.
In 2008, the
American Art Museum hosted an alternate reality game, called ''Ghosts of a Chance'', which was created by City Mystery.
The game allowed patrons "a new way of engaging with the collection" in the Luce Foundation Center.
The game ran for six weeks and attracted more than 6,000 participants.
Rise of the self-supporting ARG
The first major attempt (other than EA's failed ''
Majestic'') to create a self-supporting ARG was ''
Perplex City'', which launched in 2005 after a year's worth of teasers. The ARG offered a $200,000 prize to the first player to locate the buried Receda Cube and was funded by the sale of puzzle cards. The first season of the game ended in January 2007, when Andy Darley found the Receda Cube at Wakerly Great Wood in Northamptonshire, UK. Mind Candy, the production company, has also produced a board game related to the ARG and plans to continue it with a second season beginning 1 March 2007. This model was delayed till 1 June, and has again, been delayed to an unspecified date. Mind Candy's acceptance of corporate sponsorship and venture capital suggests that the puzzle cards alone are not enough to fully fund the ARG at this time.
In June 2006, Catching the Wish launched from an in-game website about comic books based on its predecessor, 2003's ''Chasing the Wish''. 42 Entertainment released ''
Cathy's Book'', by
Sean Stewart
Sean Stewart (born June 2, 1965) is an American-Canadian science fiction and fantasy author.
Biography
Born in Lubbock, Texas, Sean Stewart moved to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada in 1968. After stints in Houston, Texas, Vancouver, British Colum ...
and
Jordan Weisman, in October 2006, shifting the central medium of this ARG from the internet to the printed page. The young-adult novel contains an "evidence packet" and expands its universe through websites and working phone numbers, but is also a stand-alone novel that essentially functions as an individually playable ARG. Neither the cost of creating the book nor sales figures are available (although it made both American and British bestseller lists) to determine whether the project was successfully self-funded.
Serious ARG
In a 2007 article, columnist Chris Dahlen (of Pitchfork Media) voiced a much-discussed ARG concept: if ARGs can spark players to solve very hard fictional problems, could the games be used to solve real-world problems? Dahlen was writing about ''
World Without Oil'', the first ARG centered on a serious near-future scenario: a global oil shortage.
In October 2008 The
British Red Cross
The British Red Cross Society () is the United Kingdom body of the worldwide neutral and impartial humanitarian network the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. The society was formed in 1870, and is a registered charity with 1 ...
created a serious ARG called Traces of Hope to promote their campaign about civilians caught up in conflict.
The
USC School of Cinematic Arts
The USC School of Cinematic Arts is an academic unit of the University of Southern California, in Los Angeles, California, Los Angeles. With a history that dates to the first years of Sound film, talkies, the school descends from America's first ...
has run a semester-long ARG called
Reality Ends Here for incoming freshmen since 2011. The game involves players collaborating and competing to produce media artifacts. In 2012, Reality Ends Here won the Impact Award at
IndieCade, presented to games which "have social message, shift the cultural perception of games as a medium, represent a new play paradigm, expand the audience, or influence culture."
The Plan of Gauss was a game developed as a didactic strategy to enhance the learning and understanding of mathematics in university students. In this game, the players had to help characters (students) to find a missing friend.
New developments
In February 2007, Microsoft published the game ''Vanishing Point'' to promote the launch of
Windows Vista
Windows Vista is a major release of the Windows NT operating system developed by Microsoft. It was the direct successor to Windows XP, released five years earlier, which was then the longest time span between successive releases of Microsoft W ...
. The game was designed by 42 Entertainment and, due in part to many large-scale real-world events, such as a lavish show at the
Bellagio Fountain in Las Vegas as well as a prizes of a trip into space and having a winner's name engraved on all AMD Athlon 64 FX chips for a certain period of time, received large media attention.

A few days later, another ARG by 42 Entertainment was released, for the release of the
Nine Inch Nails
Nine Inch Nails, commonly abbreviated as NIN (stylized as NIИ), is an American industrial rock band formed in Cleveland, Ohio in 1988. Its members are the singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer Trent Reznor and his frequent col ...
album ''
Year Zero
A year zero does not exist in the Anno Domini (AD) calendar year system commonly used to number years in the Gregorian calendar (nor in its predecessor, the Julian calendar); in this system, the year is followed directly by year (which is the ...
''. In that ARG, fans discovered leaked songs on
thumb drives in washrooms at concerts, as well as clues to
websites
A website (also written as a web site) is any web page whose content is identified by a common domain name and is published on at least one web server. Websites are typically dedicated to a particular topic or purpose, such as news, education ...
that describe a dystopian future occurring in 2022.
Perplex City concluded its first season by awarding a $200,000 prize to a player who found the game's missing cube. They planned to continue the ARG into a second "season" under the name
Perplex City Stories without a large grand prize, but it was ultimately cancelled.
[Post-Game PM Chat Logs](_blank)
Accessed 21 February 2007.
In May 2007, 42 Entertainment launched ''
Why So Serious
''The Dark Knight'' is a 2008 superhero film directed by Christopher Nolan, from a screenplay co-written with his brother Jonathan Nolan, Jonathan. Based on the DC Comics superhero Batman, it is the sequel to ''Batman Begins'' (2005), and ...
'', an ARG to promote the feature film ''
The Dark Knight
''The Dark Knight'' is a 2008 superhero film directed by Christopher Nolan, from a screenplay co-written with his brother Jonathan. Based on the DC Comics superhero Batman, it is the sequel to ''Batman Begins'' (2005), and the second inst ...
''. It played out over 15 months, concluding in July 2008. Millions of players in 177 countries participated both online and taking part in live events, and it reached hundreds of millions through Internet buzz and exposure. Notably, ''Why So Serious'' prompted a great deal of collaborative organizing and action; players went to the streets campaigning for Harvey Dent and gathered in New York City as a part of gameplay.
In March 2008, McDonald's and the IOC launched ''
Find The Lost Ring'', a global ARG promoting the
2008 Summer Olympics
The 2008 Summer Olympics (), officially the Games of the XXIX Olympiad () and officially branded as Beijing 2008 (), were an international multisport event held from 8 to 24 August 2008, in Beijing, China. A total of 10,942 athletes fro ...
in Beijing, China. The game was run simultaneously in six languages with new story lines developing in each, encouraging players to communicate with residents of other countries to facilitate sharing of clues and details of the game as a whole. American track and field athlete
Edwin Moses
Edwin Corley Moses (born August 31, 1955) is an Americans, American former Hurdling, hurdler who won gold medals in the 400 metres hurdles, 400 m hurdles at the 1976 Summer Olympics, 1976 and 1984 Summer Olympics, 1984 Olympics. Between 1977 an ...
acted as a celebrity Game Master, and McDonald's Corporation promised to donate US$100,000 to
Ronald McDonald House Charities China on behalf of the players.
On 1 March 2010, ''
Valve
A valve is a device or natural object that regulates, directs or controls the flow of a fluid (gases, liquids, fluidized solids, or Slurry, slurries) by opening, closing, or partially obstructing various passageways. Valves are technically Pip ...
'' released an update via ''
Steam
Steam is water vapor, often mixed with air or an aerosol of liquid water droplets. This may occur due to evaporation or due to boiling, where heat is applied until water reaches the enthalpy of vaporization. Saturated or superheated steam is inv ...
'' to their game ''
Portal'', adding a nondescript new achievement and some .wav files hidden within the game GCFs. The .wav files actually contained
morse code
Morse code is a telecommunications method which Character encoding, encodes Written language, text characters as standardized sequences of two different signal durations, called ''dots'' and ''dashes'', or ''dits'' and ''dahs''. Morse code i ...
and
SSTV encoded images, some including certain numbers and letters. When pieced together in the correct order, these numbers and letters formed a 32-bit
MD5
The MD5 message-digest algorithm is a widely used hash function producing a 128-bit hash value. MD5 was designed by Ronald Rivest in 1991 to replace an earlier hash function MD4, and was specified in 1992 as Request for Comments, RFC 1321.
MD5 ...
hash of a
BBS phone number. When traced, it was found to originate from
Kirkland, Washington
Kirkland is a city in King County, Washington, United States. A suburb east of Seattle, its population was 92,175 in the 2020 U.S. census which made it the sixth largest city in King County and the twelfth largest city in the state of Washington. ...
, where Valve was based before moving to
Bellevue, Washington
Bellevue ( ) is a city in the Eastside (King County, Washington), Eastside region of King County, Washington, United States, located across Lake Washington from Seattle. It is the third-largest city in the Seattle metropolitan area, and the f ...
in 2003. Accessing the number as a bulletin board system yielded large
ASCII art
ASCII art is a graphic design technique that uses computers for presentation and consists of pictures pieced together from the 95 printable (from a total of 128) character (computing), characters defined by the ASCII Standard from 1963 and ASCI ...
images, all leading towards the announcement of the game's sequel, ''
Portal 2''.
Later, prior to release of ''Portal 2'' in 2011, a much more expansive ARG called the ''
Potato Sack'' was run, arranged by a number of independent developers working with Valve, to simulate the re-booting of
GLaDOS. The ARG resulted in the game being released several hours earlier than scheduled, among other details.
Also launched in March 2010, an ARG produced by David Varela at
nDreams featured the 2008 Formula 1 World Champion
Lewis Hamilton
Sir Lewis Carl Davidson Hamilton (born 7 January 1985) is a British racing driver who competes in Formula One for Scuderia Ferrari, Ferrari. Hamilton has won a joint-record seven Formula One World Drivers' Championship titles—tied with M ...
; entitled ''Lewis Hamilton: Secret Life'', the game ran throughout the 2010 Formula 1 season, in nine languages, with live events in a dozen cities around the world.
In July 2013, Walt Disney Imagineering Research & Development and The Walt Disney Studios launched
The Optimist, built around "a story of Walt Disney, the Imagineers, and other visionary thinkers and their potential involvement in a secret project that sought to build a better future." The game culminated at the D23 Expo in Anaheim, Calif., August 9–11, 2013. Players participated over a six-week period, using social media, mobile devices, and apps, while visiting locations from the story in and around Los Angeles.
An ARG accompanying the Kickstarter campaign for ''
Frog Fractions 2'' began in March 2014 and completed in 2016. ''Frog Fractions 2'' will be the sequel to Twinbeard Studio's much acclaimed ''
Frog Fractions'', although the ARG itself is often referred to as ''Frog Fractions 1.5'' in reference to an in-ARG puzzle solution. The ARG took about two years to solve, involving clues buried in 23 independent games and real-life locations, allowing the game, secretly already uploaded under the guise of a different game, to become unlocked in December 2016.
On the release of the expansion ''Afterbirth'' for ''
The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth'' in October 2015, players discover clues hinting towards an ARG related to the game, based on the community's previous attempts to hack the game to discover any secret characters. The ARG included location information near Santa Cruz, California, where the game's developer
Edmund McMillen lived. The ARG was successfully completed in November 2015, with the community working together and enabling a new character and additional content to be unlocked for the game.
''
Inscryption
''Inscryption'' is a 2021 roguelike deck-building game developed by Daniel Mullins Games and published by Devolver Digital. Directed by Daniel Mullins, it was originally released for Windows on October 19, 2021, and on Linux, macOS, PlayStation 4 ...
'', a video game by Daniel Mullins based on a
metafiction
Metafiction is a form of fiction that emphasizes its own narrative structure in a way that inherently reminds the audience that they are reading or viewing a fictional work. Metafiction is self-conscious about language, literary form, and story ...
narrative, including a post-game ARG that involved real-world clues and references to Mullins' past games in conjunction with in-game materials, leading to additional narrative and endings for the game.
In December 2020, a long-unsolved puzzle from
Perplex City, ''Billion to One'', was solved. The puzzle focused on exploring the concept of
Six degrees of separation
Six degrees of separation is the idea that all people are six or fewer social connections away from each other. As a result, a chain of "friend of a friend" statements can be made to connect any two people in a maximum of six steps. It is al ...
by presenting a man's photograph and his first name, "Satoshi", asking players to locate him. In 2020, Tom-Lucas Säger used image recognition software and located Satoshi, reporting it to
Laura E. Hall, who ran the website tracking information about the hunt.
Television tie-ins and "extended experiences"
In 2006, the TV tie-in ARG began to come into its own when there was a surge of ARGs that extended the worlds of related television shows onto the Internet and into the real world. As with ''
Push, Nevada
''Push, Nevada'' is an American mystery television series set in the fictional town of Push, Nevada. It premiered on September 17, 2002, on ABC, and ran for seven episodes before it became one of the first shows to be canceled during the Fall ...
'', ABC led the way, launching three TV tie-in ARGs in 2006: ''
Kyle XY
''Kyle XY'' is an American science fiction television series created by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber and produced by ABC Signature, ABC Studios. The central character is a teenage boy (Matt Dallas) who awakens naked in a forest outside Seattl ...
'', Ocular Effect (for the show ''Fallen'') and The Lost Experience (for the show ''
Lost'').
ABC joined with
Channel 4
Channel 4 is a British free-to-air public broadcast television channel owned and operated by Channel Four Television Corporation. It is state-owned enterprise, publicly owned but, unlike the BBC, it receives no public funding and is funded en ...
in the UK and Australia's
Channel 7 in promoting a revamped website for
The Hanso Foundation. The site was focused on a fictitious company prevalent in the storyline of the TV series, and the game was promoted through television advertisements run during ''Lost'' episodes. The Fallen Alternate Reality Game was launched in tandem with the ''Fallen'' TV movie for ABC Family and was originally conceived by
Matt Wolf and created by Matt Wolf (Double Twenty Productions) in association with Xenophile Media. Wolf accepted the Emmy for The Fallen Alternate Reality Game at the 59th Annual Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards on September 8, 2007.
In January 2008, BBC launched "Whack the Mole" for the CBBC show ''
M.I. High
''M.I. High'' is a British action television series produced by Kudos for CBBC and created by Keith Brumpton. The series focused on a team of undercover teenage spies working for the fictional British secret intelligence agency MI9 who had to ...
'', in which viewers are asked to become M.I. High field agents and complete tasks to capture a mole that has infiltrated the organization.
On 16 March 2011,
BitTorrent
BitTorrent is a Protocol (computing), communication protocol for peer-to-peer file sharing (P2P), which enables users to distribute data and electronic files over the Internet in a Decentralised system, decentralized manner. The protocol is d ...
promoted an open licensed version of the feature film ''
Zenith
The zenith (, ) is the imaginary point on the celestial sphere directly "above" a particular location. "Above" means in the vertical direction (Vertical and horizontal, plumb line) opposite to the gravity direction at that location (nadir). The z ...
'' in the United States. Users who downloaded the BitTorrent client software were also encouraged to download and share Part One of three parts of the film. On 4 May 2011, Part Two of the film was made available on
VODO. The episodic release of the film, supplemented by an ARG transmedia marketing campaign, created a viral effect and over a million users downloaded the movie.
In 2016, ''
Gravity Falls
''Gravity Falls'' is an American Mystery fiction, mystery television comedy, comedy animated television series created by Alex Hirsch for Disney Channel and Disney XD. The series follows the adventures of Dipper Pines (Jason Ritter) and his twi ...
'' creator
Alex Hirsch conducted an ARG called ''
Cipher Hunt''. Hirsch started the game with the posting of an initial clue on his Twitter account, followed by the rules. It lasted from July to August 2016, and its goal was to find the clues hidden in various places around the world leading to the location of a statue of
Bill Cipher. Said statue could be seen briefly after the ending credits of the
series finale
A series finale is the final installment of an episodic entertainment series, most often a television series. It may also refer to a final theatrical sequel, the last part of a television miniseries, the last installment of a literary series, ...
.
Awards won
ARGs have been recognized by the mainstream entertainment world: The Ocular Effect, an ARG promoting the TV movie ''The Fallen'' and produced in the autumn of 2007 by Xenophile Media Inc. was awarded a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Achievement for an Interactive Television Program. Xenophile Media Inc.'s ReGenesis Extended Reality Game won an International Interactive Emmy Award in 2007 and in April 2008
The Truth About Marika won the iEmmy for Best Interactive TV service. The British Academy of Film and Television Arts recognizes Interactivity as a category in the British Academy Television Awards.
Likewise,
Year Zero
A year zero does not exist in the Anno Domini (AD) calendar year system commonly used to number years in the Gregorian calendar (nor in its predecessor, the Julian calendar); in this system, the year is followed directly by year (which is the ...
was widely heralded following its release. Such acclaim is signified in the ARG's Grand Prix Cyber Lions award, viewed as "the most prestigious of all advertising awards," at Cannes. Adweek published a quote from the selection committee on the award decision, explaining that "42 Entertainment's
iral campaign for Nine Inch Nailsimpressed the jury because of its use of a variety of media, from outdoor to guerrilla to online, and how digital
ediacan play a central role of a big idea campaign."
In turn,
Why So Serious
''The Dark Knight'' is a 2008 superhero film directed by Christopher Nolan, from a screenplay co-written with his brother Jonathan Nolan, Jonathan. Based on the DC Comics superhero Batman, it is the sequel to ''Batman Begins'' (2005), and ...
also won a Grand Prix Award, alongside a Webby for interactive advertising. World Without Oil was recognized for its achievements, too, earning the Activism award at the 2008 SXSW Web Awards.
Project Architeuthis, created for the U.S. Navy as a recruiting device for its cryptology division, won numerous awards, including the 2015 Warc Grand Prix for Social Strategy.
See also
*
List of alternate reality games
*
History of alternate reality games
*
Ergodic literature
Ergodic literature is a term neologism, coined by Espen J. Aarseth in his 1997 book ''Cybertext—Perspectives on Ergodic Literature'' to describe literature in which nontrivial effort is required for the reader to traverse the text. The term ...
*
Hyperreality
Hyperreality is a concept in post-structuralism that refers to the process of the evolution of notions of reality, leading to a cultural state of confusion between signs and symbols invented to stand in for reality, and direct perceptions of co ...
*
Legend tripping
*
Live-action game
*
Live-action virtual reality game
*
Metaverse
The metaverse is a loosely defined term referring to virtual worlds in which users represented by avatars interact, usually in 3D and focused on social and economic connection.
The term ''metaverse'' originated in the 1992 science fiction ...
*
Mixed reality game
*
Pervasive game
*
Transmedia storytelling
Transmedia storytelling (also known as transmedia narrative or multiplatform storytelling) is the technique of adapting a single story or story experience across multiple platforms and formats using current digital technologies.
From a product ...
*
Transreality gaming
*
Verisimilitude
In philosophy, verisimilitude (or truthlikeness) is the notion that some propositions are closer to being true than other propositions. The problem of verisimilitude is the problem of articulating what it takes for one false theory to be close ...
References
External links
ARGology– International Game Developers Association Alternate Reality Game Special Interest Group
Lateral Realities– Lateral Realities
{{Pervasive games
Alternate reality games
Immersive entertainment