The Larp Census

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Larp Census Screenshot

The Larp Census was an international project to "count everyone who larps, has larped, and wants to larp." It was organised by Aaron Vanek and Ryan Paddy.

Origins

The idea for a larp census originated during Wyrdcon 2012, where Vanek suggested it is one of three ways of building the global larp community.[1] A year later he mentioned it to Ryan Paddy in response to a query seeking statistics, resulting in the two deciding to collaborate. From the beginning the census was intended for an international audiance, and to avoid country-specific assumptions about the style and nature of larp.[1] There were several rounds of consultation with larpers and larp academics from around the world in an effort to find suitable questions. The final survey focused on seven key demographic questions, with a series of optional questions about motivation and related activities.

Anonymised data from the census will be released under a Creative Commons non-commercial license once data collection is complete, to allow it to be used by the global larp community.[2]

Data collection

The larp census officially launched on October 2 2014 and ran until January 10 2015. It was available in 17 languages and received over 25,000 responses from 123 countries.[3] Some preliminary results were released on rpg.net in December 2014 giving some information about age, gender, and length of participation.[1]

External links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 One Shot #24: Secrets of the LARP Census, rpg.net, 4 December 2014. Retrieved on 4 January 2015.
  2. Larp Census FAQ, Larp Census.Retrieved on 4 January 2015.
  3. Aaron Vanek, "Behind the larp census: 29.751 larpers can’t (all) be wrong". In Charles Bo Nielsen & Claus Raasted (eds), The Knudepunkt 2015 Companion Book. Rollespilsakademiet, 2015.