Morrisville State College among handful of sites in New York State hosting Global Game Jam January 29-31

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MORRISVILLE, NY— Morrisville State College will once again serve as a host site for teams of artists, hobbyists, programmers, designers and musicians during the popular Global Game Jam ™ (GGJ) which will be held Jan. 29-31.

Morrisville is one of only a handful of sites in New York State hosting the event, which is a chance for gamers throughout the world to collaborate, explore creativity, tout inventiveness and let their imaginations roam as they create playable video games in under 48 hours.

Morrisville State students, alumni, staff and community members will be among thousands of participants from all over the world taking part in the GGJ, which is recognized as the largest event of its kind in the world by the Guinness Book of World Records. Eight new countries have joined the ranks of countries involved in the massive game development event; Estonia, Kuwait, Lebanon, Nepal, Palestinian Territories, Paraguay, Ukraine and Vietnam.

The event is open for amateurs, professionals, hobbyists and those with a passion for making games. Anyone over the age of 18 can register to participate in the GGJ at Morrisville State. Registration, which is required, is $10 and includes a T-shirt. 

The annual event begins on Friday Jan. 29 in Charlton Hall and kicks off with video keynotes and advice from leaders in the game development industry. The jam formally begins after an announcement of the year’s theme, which is kept secret until the last second. 

Participants break into teams which will be formed on-site, then spend the next 48 hours brainstorming and designing a new game from scratch without any outside help. All finished GGJ games will be archived onto a Game Jam website for everyone to play. 

This is the seventh year the college will be serving as a host site for the international event, now in its eighth year. Some of the games participants at the Morrisville site have created include: Traps: The Spanish Adventurer (a journey to prove capability as an adventurer, by collecting all of the gold); Ex-Extinction (Sir Captain Rawrington must save his dinosaur ancestors from the incoming asteroid onslaught); and Flight Team Phoenix (pilot a phoenix spaceship and eliminate alien enemies). 

Last year 35 participants at the Morrisville site produced five video games, consuming 12 pizzas and 10 cases of soda in the process.

For more information or to register to participate at the Morrisville State Game Jam site, go to www.morrisville.edu/gamejam, contact Richard Marcoux, Ph.D., at 315.684.6788 or e-mail him at marcourp@morrisville.edu. 

For more information on the Global Game Jam, including a database of downloadable games, photos and video from the events and more, visit: http://globalgamejam.org.

Morrisville State’s curricula are enriched with applied learning and pave the way for opportunity at both the Morrisville and Norwich campuses. An action-oriented, interactive learning lab, the college is a national leader in technology and has been lauded for its exemplary, innovative and effective community service programs. 

The college was ranked among the Best Regional Colleges in the North by U.S. News and World Report Best Colleges 2016 issue and was also recognized in the Top Public Schools, Regional Colleges North in the 2016 Best Colleges rankings. 

Global Game Jam history

2009 Game Jam—53 sites, 1,650 participants created 370 games 

2010 Game Jam—138 sites, 4,300 participants created 900 games

2011 Game Jam—169 sites, 6,500 participants created more than 1,500 games

2012 Game Jam—242 sites (47 countries)—more than 10,684 participants created 2,209 games. Jam sites were organized in a record 47 countries, including for the first time in Hungary, Iran, Panama, Peru, Romania and Uruguay. 

2013 Game Jam—319 sites (63 countries)—more than 16,000 participants created 3,248 games 

2014 Game Jam—488 sites (72 countries)—more than 23,189 participants created 4,292 games 

2015 Game Jam—518 sites (78 countries), more than 28,000 participants