Indie Megabooth
The Indie Megabooth is a section at game expositions, legally incorporated under the name Indie Megacorp, Corp,[1] dedicated to the display and promotion of indie games. It launched at PAX East 2012[2] and continued to only appear at PAX events[3][4][5][6][7] before expanding to other shows including the Eurogamer Expo,[2] Electronic Entertainment Expo,[8] Game Developers Conference,[9] and Gamescom.[10] It was founded by Kelly Wallick, who became the booth's full-time organizer in 2013.[11][12]
After a brief hiatus during the COVID-19 pandemic,[13] the Indie Megabooth organizers announced their return in 2023.[14] As of 2024, the Indie Megabooth has not announced what their next event will be.[14]
According to scholars, the Indie Megabooth has helped to shape video game culture and the industry as a cultural intermediary.[1]
History
[edit | edit source]The first Indie Megabooth took place at PAX East in 2012 with 16 developers and 20 games.[11] That same year, at PAX Prime (now known as PAX West), it held 30 developers and 30 games.[11] In 2013, its PAX East showing included 50 developers with 62 games.[11] In only a year, it had more than doubled in size.
Between PAX East 2013 and PAX Prime 2013, the Indie Megabooth organization legally incorporated under the name Indie Megacorp, Corp.[1] Kelly Wallick left her career as a project manager with Infrared5 to become acting president, secretary, treasurer, and only full-time employee.[11][1] Eitan Glinert became the vice-president.[1]
2014 marked the first time the Megabooth took place at a non-PAX event. It showed 15 games at the Game Developers Conference (GDC).[9] At that time, organizers announced they would make a "concerted effort" to bring the Megabooth to many events moving forward.[9]
True to their word, the Megabooth took place that same year at Gamescom for its first appearance overseas.[10]
In 2015, the Indie Megabooth took place at the Eurogamer Expo.[2] In 2017, it took part in the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3).[8]
The showings at Gamescom, Eurogamer, and E3 were all one-offs, but GDC—along with PAX West and PAX East—became a regular in their lineup.[15]
In 2017, the Indie Megabooth created and held its own convention in Atlanta called the Indie Megashow.[16] Along with showing indie video games, the convention included nine local musicians and four art installations from local artists.[16]
By 2018, the Indie Megabooth received between 200 and 300 submissions for each event.[1] The organizers would narrow that number down to between 60 and 80 games.[1]
In 2020, the Indie Megabooth's organizers chose to "sunset" the Indie Megabooth for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic.[13]
In 2023, Wallick announced that the Indie Megabooth would be returning from its "hibernation."[17] The announcement was a part of that year's Summer Game Fest during its Day of the Devs segment.[14] No specific events were stated in its future plans.[14]
Cultural intermediary
[edit | edit source]The term cultural intermediary was brought to the forefront by Pierre Bourdieu in his book Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste.[18] He describes cultural intermediaries as "sellers of symbolic goods," "taste makers," and "authorities of legitimation."[19] The idea of selling symbolic goods could be restated as manipulating culture.[1]
Academic scholars have commented that the Indie Megabooth fulfills the role of a seller of symbolic goods, a tastemaker, and an authority of legitimation, thus filling the roll of cultural intermediary.[1] The Indie Megabooth manipulates culture by deciding what games will be showcased at events, which influences what games are popular in the indie video game community.[1] This is now a main part of the Indie Megabooth's identity: they are experts who play hundreds of new games every year and pick out the most creative and most innovative to show to the public.[1]
References
[edit | edit source]- Parker, Felan; Whitson, Jennifer R; Simon, Bart (May 2018). "Megabooth: The cultural intermediation of indie games". New Media & Society. 20 (5): 1953–1972. doi:10.1177/1461444817711403. ISSN 1461-4448. PMC 6256716. PMID 30581359.
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External links
[edit | edit source]Error creating thumbnail: File missing Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons
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