Dogma 99: Difference between revisions
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'''Dogma 99''' is a [[larp manifesto]] written by Lars Wingård and Eirik Fatland. It is one of the foundational texts of [[Nordic larp]] and has been deeply influential on that style of larping.<ref>[http://www.hopesandfears.com/hopes/culture/film/168793-dogma-99-larpers Feel something real: The Dogme 95-inspired battle for the heart of live action role-playing], ''Hopes & Fears'', March 31 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2016.</ref> It inspired a succession of other manifestos, including the [[Manifesto of the Turku School]]. | '''Dogma 99''' is a [[larp manifesto]] written by Lars Wingård and Eirik Fatland. It is one of the foundational texts of [[Nordic larp]] and has been deeply influential on that style of larping.<ref>[http://www.hopesandfears.com/hopes/culture/film/168793-dogma-99-larpers Feel something real: The Dogme 95-inspired battle for the heart of live action role-playing], ''Hopes & Fears'', March 31 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2016.</ref> It inspired a succession of other manifestos, including the [[Manifesto of the Turku School]]. | ||
Dogma 99 opposed the features and tropes of "conventional" larp, including [[mechanics]], [[props]], backstory and secrecy (and hence implicitly [[brute-force design]]), action, violence, genre and [[Gamism]]. Instead, it emphasized [[transparency]], player equality, and realism. Its authors now consider Dogma 99 to be "an archaic text", as its target, conventional larp, is "no longer around".<ref>Eirik Fatland and Lars Wingård, "The Dogma 99 Manifesto", ''The Foundation Stone of Nordic Larp'', Knutpunkt 2014. p. 287</ref> Many of the defining features of Nordic larp - the lack of mechanics, the shift away from traditional story forms, and the [[360 degree illusion]] - have been heavily influenced by Dogma 99. | Dogma 99 opposed the features and tropes of "conventional" larp, including [[mechanics]], [[props]], backstory and secrecy (and hence implicitly [[brute-force design]]), action, violence, genre and [[Gamist|Gamism]]. Instead, it emphasized [[transparency]], player equality, and realism. Its authors now consider Dogma 99 to be "an archaic text", as its target, conventional larp, is "no longer around".<ref>Eirik Fatland and Lars Wingård, "The Dogma 99 Manifesto", ''The Foundation Stone of Nordic Larp'', Knutpunkt 2014. p. 287</ref> Many of the defining features of Nordic larp - the lack of mechanics, the shift away from traditional story forms, and the [[360 degree illusion]] - have been heavily influenced by Dogma 99. | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 21:00, 28 December 2017
Dogma 99 is a larp manifesto written by Lars Wingård and Eirik Fatland. It is one of the foundational texts of Nordic larp and has been deeply influential on that style of larping.[1] It inspired a succession of other manifestos, including the Manifesto of the Turku School.
Dogma 99 opposed the features and tropes of "conventional" larp, including mechanics, props, backstory and secrecy (and hence implicitly brute-force design), action, violence, genre and Gamism. Instead, it emphasized transparency, player equality, and realism. Its authors now consider Dogma 99 to be "an archaic text", as its target, conventional larp, is "no longer around".[2] Many of the defining features of Nordic larp - the lack of mechanics, the shift away from traditional story forms, and the 360 degree illusion - have been heavily influenced by Dogma 99.
References
- ↑ Feel something real: The Dogme 95-inspired battle for the heart of live action role-playing, Hopes & Fears, March 31 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2016.
- ↑ Eirik Fatland and Lars Wingård, "The Dogma 99 Manifesto", The Foundation Stone of Nordic Larp, Knutpunkt 2014. p. 287
External links
- Dogma 99 manifesto
- Dogma 99 at the Nordic Larp Wiki