To open the conference, John Hanke [of] Niantic, the developers of Pokemon GO and Ingress, took the stage with Chris Plante from Polygon, to discuss the current state and future of Augmented Reality. [In short,] the beginning of AR was a letdown. Augmented Reality started back about four to five years ago with marker tracking, where a person would place an object/marker in view of a camera, and a digital construct would pop out of it. Hanke asserted that this never took off because it felt gimmicky. It lacked depth and did not connect with the general consumer. What is different now with Pokemon Go and the advancements in AR?
The push from tech giants [like] Apple and Google have moved the field forward, accelerating the growth of the technology. Hanke believes the technology we see in phones, Apple’s ARkit [for example], will be featured in AR devices of the future, such as AR glasses. As game designers, it is up to us to decide how we use this technology.
Hanke argues that Pokemon GO’s success stems from how they used the medium. Using both the camera and the players geo location, it encourages players to go outside and interface with the real world, creating an experience that doesn’t otherwise exist. Players leave their homes and travel to locations for special Pokemon, items, and raids. Players share this experience with others, connecting through techniques commonly used in MMO (Massively Multiplayer Online) games. Niantic’s games even offer up massive events where millions come from all over the world to share one experience. Hanke stated that the social aspect of Pokemon GO will remain its most prominent pillar in gameplay features moving forward. Niantic intends to connect people by connecting the real world and the digital.
What makes AR special then? What should you do with it? AR is a unique interconnection between the real world and the digital. Currently at Blue Goji, we’re building a mobile game that blends the two experiences. We not only want to create relationships and interactions in the real world, that otherwise wouldn’t exist, but also add to ones that do (Unfortunately I can’t say more about my current project). A tabletop game already exists in other mediums. How can AR build on and add to the experience, whether it’s an app, game, or any product? Find ways to incorporate the real world and the people that live in it. Use AR to cultivate the human experience.
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