Class Wargames
Class Wargames is a situationist ludic-science group based in London. Founded by Richard Barbrook and Fabian Tompsett in 2007, the group has since reproduced Guy Debord's Le Jeu de la Guerre and proceeded to tour Europe, Asia and South America.[1] In contrast to the electronic version of Debord's game, created by the Radical Software Group,[2] Class Wargames is based on a real rather than digital version of the Game of War and allows for convivial interaction through which anyone can become a situationist.[3]
Class Wargames in St. Petersburg (2008) | |
Motto | Ludic subversion against spectacular captitalism |
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Founder | Richard Barbrook, Fabian Tompsett |
Key people | Richard Barbrook, Ilze Black, Lucy Blake, Mark Copplestone, Rod Dickinson, Stefan Lutschinger, James Moulding, Fabian Tompsett, Alex Veness, Elena Vorontsova |
Meaningful Votes: The Brexit Simulation was a wargame designed by Richard Barbrook to help understand the dynamics of the political factions in United Kingdoms around the Brexit [4].
Publications
- Barbrook, Richard (2014). Class Wargames: Ludic Subversion Against Spectacular Capitalism (paperback ed.). London: Minor Compositions. ISBN 978-1-57027-293-6
- Barbrook, Richard and Tompsett, Fabian (2012) Class Wargames Presents Guy Debord's The Game of War (paperback ed.). London: Unpopular Books.
- Lutschinger, Stefan (2014) (ed.) Klassenkampfspiele (paperback ed.). London: Unpopular Books. ISBN 978-1-871593-92-1
gollark: Please not this again...
gollark: I made some *horrific* lineages yesterday.
gollark: Plus one actual-3G.
gollark: I could, except they're all on cooldown after my massbreed.
gollark: I can also breed saltinselmessies.
References
- "Class Wargames: Ludic subversion in the bureaucratic society of controlled consumption | Class Wargames".
- "Kriegspiel -- About: Overview".
- "Institute of Network Cultures | How to be Modern: A Situationist social democrat's adventures in radio, gaming and the internet".
- Cooper, Luke (23 July 2019). "We wargamed the last days of Brexit. Here's what we found out". openDemocracy. Retrieved 2019-08-21.
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