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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

AbleGamers Foundation
Founded2004
FoundersMark Barlet
TypePublic Charity
FocusImproving accessibility in video games
HeadquartersKearneysville, West Virginia
Founder and Executive Director
Mark C. Barlet
Key people
Mark Barlet, Steve Spohn, Craig Kaufman, Chris Power
Revenue
~$2,000,000 in 2021
Employees
11
Websiteablegamers.org

The AbleGamers Foundation (also known as The AbleGamers Charity) is an American nonprofit organization dedicated to improving accessibility in the video game space, enabling more people with disabilities to be able to play video games.[1][2] The charity creates resources, assists individuals in getting the peripherals they need, runs scholarships,[3] and works with video game publishers and video game companies to improve accessibility.[4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Eyes to the Skies | AbleGamers 2020 | Free For All | Game 1 | PA 544
  • WORST PS4 GRAPHICS EVER, GABE TALKS VALVE'S NEXT GAMES, & MORE

Transcription

Video games are becoming part of our daily life, and you might not even know it. ROBITAILLE: Video gaming is an $11 billion industry, and it's only getting bigger. I don't know if the industry is aware of the amount of disabled players that are out there. There are 33 million people with disabilities that play games. Gamers are everywhere. It's a big secret. But trust me -- We're out there. I think the real important thing that gaming brings is that social interaction. You really want gamers with and without disabilities together forming these communities, because that helps break down barriers of perception about people with disabilities. Back when I was in grade school, a friend of mine introduced me to my first Atari. It was around then that I began to realize that video games were something that I could do just like anyone else. I'm real passionate about the ability to paint yourself and present yourself in a way that you want to be seen. In a video game, you see my avatar. You see my helmet and my horns, and you go, "Oh, that's cool," and you just go on about it. That's such a great equalizer, because we're all in the game. You can do something together. You get to learn to know each other. That makes us all more of a community. BARLET: I started looking online for some resources to support the 33 million gamers with disabilities. We found nothing. So we created it. He's created a network so people are not isolated anymore. They can talk to each other about their barriers and their obstacles to gaming. It's helping so many people to bring their passion to life and be able to game in the way that's best for them. It becomes this real community of gamers with disabilities helping gamers with disabilities. SPOHN: Come on. You versus me. One race. [ Laughs ] Right in the beginning, you've wrecked me. That's it. You were the person that I was thinking about when we were going through this and designed this device. SPOHN: I sat there and helped figure out with you where the buttons should go. BARLET: Yeah. Adroit is the most friendly device that I've found so far. If you really love a game and if you want to be good at it, you can be good at it. Sometimes it takes some thinking outside of the box, but it can be done. So, AbleGamers, you rule. Just pointing it out. You know, there are 54 million Americans with disabilities. And many of them want to do a lot of things they can't do, and some of them take it upon themselves to create things that would help them and end up helping the wider community. I think one of the most powerful things AbleGamers is able to do is to reach out to big companies, big content producers, and explain to them why they should be caring about people with disabilities. And we don't give the sad story, because we don't think the sad story is what we as an organization want to present. We want to talk about us as a market. ROMEO: As a game designer, as somebody who's engaged in pop culture, in creating pop-cultural artifacts, I think we definitely do want to have a larger audience. And if it's possible to include disabled players as part of that, sure, absolutely. What the AbleGamers Foundation is really trying to do is change a culture. We want every developer to heed our call and add accessibility to the nth degree. I want the AbleGamers Foundation to teach you how to make your content accessible. And then I'm going to work very hard to make it part of your culture. So that the game you're working on today is accessible, but you're sitting in a boardroom as an executive producer for the next title, going, "Well, what about accessibility? What about accessibility?" That's a win. -BARLET: Stop. Come back here. -SPOHN: Oh, no. No, no, no. BARLET: No, no, no, no, no. Oh! Come on. So close! For me, it's just a matter of being able to do something I couldn't otherwise do. -BARLET: Oh! [ Laughs ] -SPOHN: Fail. Those kind of door-opening experiences, particularly when you can share it with a friend, they're priceless. [ Engines revving ] MALE VOICE: You win. The creation of the AbleGamers as a whole was really me trying to hang on to what was important to me. And I knew it had to be important to other people as well.

History

A man seated in a wheelchair, facing to the right of the camera.
Steven Spohn, COO of AbleGamers, at the Game Developers Conference 2022

AbleGamers was founded by Mark Barlet in 2004 after his best friend, Stephanie Walker, began losing the ability to control a computer mouse due to multiple sclerosis. Barlet and Walker used video games as a way of socializing and maintaining their close friendship. AbleGamers was created with the goal of assisting people with disabilities to play video games.[5] The charity works with individuals to assess their needs and challenges, determining what equipment they need to help them play video games, including both existing and new, custom-made hardware. This includes both online consultations and visits to the charity's facilities.[6] The charity helps up to 300 people every year through direct support, and more through online resources.[7] While the program was initially opened for applications only at certain times of the year, it began being offered year-round from 2013.[8]

The charity has opened Accessibility Arcades in locations such as Washington, D.C.'s Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library and the University of Toronto's Semaphore Research Cluster, showcasing accessible hardware and games.[9][10] In 2013 the charity topped $100,000 USD in donations.[11]

January 2016 the charity announced that it was extending its mission to include a new program entitled "Expansion Packs". Partnering with sponsors, AbleGamers is building accessible game rooms for activity centers that support people with disabilities, the first being at the Pediatric Specialty Care in Hopewell PA.[12]

In 2017 AbleGamers started the Player Panels initiative, whereby gamers with disabilities work with game developers to improve the accessibility of upcoming games, and participate in research studies.[13]

Also in 2017, Mark Barlet, AbleGamer's Founder, talked at Google highlighting the organization and his involvement in bettering the lives of people with disabilities.[14]

The AbleGamers Foundation worked with Evil Controllers to design accessible peripherals for disabled gamers,[15] and in 2018 it was announced that the Xbox Adaptive Controller had been created in partnership with organizations including AbleGamers.[16]

August 6, 2020, marked the premier of a collaboration between AbleGamer's COO Steve Spohn and actor Ryan Reynolds.[17]

Spohn said in September 2020 that he had a goal of raising $1 million for AbleGamers within a year through a series of live streams in an effort he called "Spawn Together". On November 14, 2020, during their virtual convention "GlitchCon", live streaming service Twitch announced that they would be donating US$1 million to the foundation; Spohn was grateful for this contribution but did not consider it part of the $1 million target he had.[18] Spohn reached this goal in August 2021.[19]

AbleGamers was awarded its first patent in 2021 for a "Gaming support assembly and controller holster" that essentially mounts a video game controller into a surface as a way to mitigate being able to support the weight of one.[20]

Center for Inclusive Play

In 2012, The AbleGamers Foundation opened "The AbleGamers Center on Game Accessibility and Inclusive Play" in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. The center offered a place for people with disabilities to experience new accessible technology as well as a maker space for custom controller design and prototyping.[21]

AbleGamers' facility includes a life-size Songbird from BioShock Infinite donated to the charity by Irrational Games in 2014,[22] in addition to rare items such as original Fallout concept art and signed games.[7]

AbleGamers expanded to a new facility, The AbleGamers Center for Inclusive Play, in Charles Town, West Virginia, in 2017. The building was previously a US Coast Guard facility,[6] and includes space to hold consultations, demonstrations, and has a 3D printing studio for manufacturing of specialized equipment. It was funded by a grant from Level Access.[23] The new facility is a much larger space with more room for AbleGamers to create and display hardware, now has a dedicated streaming room, and had many features, such as wide doors, which made it beneficial for supporting disabled guests.[6]

AbleGamers has since moved to Kearneysville, West Virginia, and has widely expanded. The new headquarters building features gaming memorabilia, a full workshop, and the previously mentioned life-size songbird.

Mission statement

Create opportunities that enable play, in order to combat social isolation, foster inclusive communities, and improve the quality of life for people with disabilities.[24]

Five Pillars

AbleGamers utilizes five major pillars to operate under and abide by. These pillars can be thought of as different "departments" that build off of each other. Each pillar and the people who work under them contribute to the mission of the organization.

Peer-Counseling

"The AbleGamers peer counseling program crafts individualized strategies for people with disabilities to develop solutions to accessibility challenges, combat their social isolation, and join a community of millions of players worldwide.

Our peer counseling team consists of players with disabilities and occupational professionals who work together to find the best solutions to enable play. Through these one-on-one sessions, people with disabilities can connect with other like-minded players who can share their knowledge and experience firsthand."[25]

These peer counseling sessions also play hand in hand with the grant program. Adaptive technology is not always affordable. When AbleGamers find players who meet the requirements for the program, there are supportive opportunities that allow the often custom hardware to be granted.[25]

Engineering Research

The Engineering Research team works in tandem with the Peer Counseling team. When situations arise that do not have physical answers, the engineering team gets to work designing solutions. They often take controllers and modify them to fit the player's needs, whatever that may entail. The Engineering Research pillar has a state-of-the-art facility equipped with 3D printers and laser C&C cutters at their disposal. They currently have three patents, including one design patent.[26]

Community & Inclusion

The Community & Inclusion pillar sits right in the middle of the five pillars. This pillar is about combating the social isolation that comes with having a disability. The gaming community itself has historically been rich with social interaction and sub-communities that allow it to grow and thrive. AbleGamers aims to include disabled players into that already vast gaming community. Community & Inclusion works to improve accessibility at events, break stereotypes, and provide representation for people with disabilities. They also support a large group of people with disabilities through their twitch stream. The AbleGamers twitch stream allows player with disabilities to interact with other players, share their experiences, and highlight accessibility and people with disabilities as an active part of video gaming.[27]

User Research

The User Research pillar focuses on the present and future of accessibility. They are tasked with finding and documenting current options for players in games as well as barriers that still exist. "With this pillar we strive to anticipate the next big areas, such as augmented and virtual reality, so that these new technologies can be accessible faster than previous generations of gaming."[28]

The Player Panel is a huge part of User Research as well. The Player Panel is one of the world's largest group of people with disabilities dedicated to lending their experiences to make the world more accessible. There are over 400 players currently in the Player Panel program. AbleGamers acts as a middle man between these players and gaming studios (Indie to Triple-A). The purpose of the connection between the players and the gaming studios is to allow those companies to test their accessibility features, overall improving accessibility throughout video games.[28]

The User Research team also has multiple publications:

  • Cairns, P., Power, C., Barlet, M., Haynes G. (2019) Future Design of Accessibility in Games: A Design Vocabulary. Int. J. of Human-Computer Studies, 131, 64–71, doi: 10.1016/j.ijhcs.2019.06.010
  • Cairns, P. , Power, C., Barlet, M., Haynes, G., Kaufman, C., Beeston, J. (2019) Enabled Players: the value of accessible digital games, Games and Culture, online
  • Beeston, J., Power, C., Cairns, P., & Barlet, M. (2018, July). Accessible Player Experiences (APX): The Players. International Conference on Computers Helping People with Special Needs Springer, 245-253
  • Power, C., Cairns, P., Barlet, M. (2018) Inclusion in the Third Wave: Access to Experience. In Filimowicz, M., Tzankova, V. (eds) New Directions in Third Wave Human-Computer Interaction: Volume 1-Technologies. Springer, p. 163-181 [28]

Professional Development

This pillar was designed to educate game studios on how to make their games more accessible. Peer Counseling and Engineering Research are great at helping people with physical disabilities, but it all starts with the games that are being made. Professional Development teaches an APX (Accessible Player Experiences) course. There are currently 22 APX design patterns that help developers craft accessible experiences into their games. For some studios, those patterns were not enough. The Professional Development team came up with a multi-day, 16-hour course that remedies this. This completed course certifies developers as APX practitioners and gives them the deeper knowledge they need to create better accessibility in their games.[29]

Awards

Mark Barlet, president of AbleGamers, received the 2012 American Association of People with Disabilities Hearne Leadership Award for his work at AbleGamers.[30]

In 2013, AbleGamers won an MS Society Da Vinci Award for their document "Includification: A Practical Guide to Game Accessibility", the first time the award had been given to a document and concept, not a product.[31]

The foundation distributes its own awards each year to the most accessible games released that year, with winners including FIFA 13 and Bayonetta 2.[32][33][34] The awards are given to games with customisable control schemes and colors, optional or minimal quick time events, and unique features such as Bayonetta 2's one-button combat mode.[33]

References

  1. ^ Schuster, Shawn (9 April 2009). "Do Developers Consider Disabled Gamers Enough". Massively by Joystiq. Archived from the original on 29 January 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  2. ^ Adams, Paul (2011-07-14). "Gamers With Disabilities Battle Indifferent Industry". Wired. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  3. ^ Minotti, Mike (1 December 2017). "AbleGamers will send 3 developers with disabilities to Train Jam and GDC 2018". VentureBeat. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  4. ^ Corden, Jez (5 June 2018). "How AbleGamers aims to bring gaming to those with disabilities". Windows Central. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  5. ^ "Mark Barlet, Founder | The AbleGamers Charity". 2016-12-31. Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  6. ^ a b c Mejia, Ozzie (9 May 2017). "How AbleGamers Turned an Old Coast Guard Facility to a Hub for Disabled Gamers". Shacknews. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  7. ^ a b NG, Alfred (7 April 2017). "Playing Street Fighter with your face -- and kicking butt". CNET. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  8. ^ "AbleGamers grant for gamers with disabilities now permanently open". Polygon. 13 December 2013. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  9. ^ Mallory, Jordan (3 October 2012). "AbleGamers Foundation to open first permanent 'Accessibility Arcade'". Engadget. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  10. ^ Tach, Dave (22 April 2014). "Accessibility Arcade for disabled gamers opens April 26 at the University of Toronto". Polygon. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  11. ^ Tach, Dave (10 January 2014). "AbleGamers donations topped $100,000 in 2013". Polygon. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  12. ^ "Ablegamers... So Everyone can Game!". Pediatric Specialty Care. December 19, 2015.
  13. ^ Chacos, Brad (29 June 2017). "AbleGamers' Player Panels could make future games more disability-friendly". PC World. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  14. ^ AbleGamers | Mark Barlet | Talks at Google, retrieved 2021-04-27
  15. ^ Fletcher, JC (24 June 2011). "'Adroit' controller line to make games more accessible". Massively by Joystiq. Archived from the original on 1 February 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  16. ^ Conditt, Jessica (17 May 2018). "Xbox Adaptive Controller first look: A new, necessary gamepad". Engadget. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  17. ^ A word about AbleGamers from Steve Spohn and Ryan Reynolds, retrieved 2021-04-27
  18. ^ Michael, Cale (14 November 2020). "Twitch donates $1 million to AbleGamers during GlitchCon". Dot Esports. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  19. ^ Sanchez, Kait (August 19, 2021). "Spawn Together campaign surpasses $1 million fundraising goal for AbleGamers charity". The Verge. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  20. ^ US 10898794, Barlet, Mark; Hall, Jessie & Greenspan, Mark Benjamin, "Gaming support assembly and controller holster", published 2021-01-26, assigned to The AbleGamers Foundation Inc. 
  21. ^ Tipps, Seth (12 September 2013). "Charity opens facility to help disabled gamers". MCV. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  22. ^ "Songbird has Landed". YouTube. AbleGamers. January 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  23. ^ Hall, Charlie (27 April 2017). "AbleGamers opens new facility to help those with disabilities get back in the game". Polygon. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  24. ^ "The AbleGamers Charity". 2016-02-18. Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  25. ^ a b "Peer Counseling". The AbleGamers Charity. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  26. ^ "Engineering Research". The AbleGamers Charity. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  27. ^ "Community & Inclusion". The AbleGamers Charity. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  28. ^ a b c "User Research". The AbleGamers Charity. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  29. ^ "Professional Development". The AbleGamers Charity. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  30. ^ "Meet the 2012 Hearne Leadership Award Winners". AAPD. March 2012.
  31. ^ "da Vinci Award Winners announced at gala April 11, 2013". National MS Society. April 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-07-10.
  32. ^ Makuch, Eddie (2 January 2013). "FIFA 13 named AbleGamers Game of the Year". IGN. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  33. ^ a b Matulef, Jeffrey (8 January 2015). "AbleGamers names Bayonetta 2 the most accessible mainstream game of 2014". Eurogamer. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  34. ^ Tach, Dave (28 January 2014). "AbleGamers honors Final Fantasy 14, The Stanley Parable". Polygon. Retrieved 1 October 2018.

External links

This page was last edited on 19 April 2024, at 22:39
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