Paolo Pedercini Explained

Paolo Pedercini
Birth Date:1981
Nationality:Italian
Known For:
Alma Mater:Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Occupation:Video game designer
Years Active:2002–present
Website:Official site

Paolo Pedercini (born 1981) is an Italian game designer known for making Flash videogames based on provocative left-wing socio-political points of view, on topics such as labour market flexibility and Queer theory, in explicit opposition with the mainstream video game industry.[1] He is also known under the pseudonym Molleindustria, the name of his website.[2] [3] He is known for games such as Queer Power, Faith Fighter and the McDonald's Video Game. The games are often offered as freeware under a Creative Commons NonCommercial license.[4] [5]

Works and activism

In 2003, Pedercini launched Molleindustria, a platform for politically active video games, along with a manifesto. The manifesto described Molleindustria as the "theory and practice of soft conflict – sneaky, viral, guerrillero, subliminal conflict – through and within videogames."[6]

In June 2007 the game Operazione: Pretofilia (Operation: Pedopriest), inspired by the controversial BBC documentary Sex Crimes and the Vatican, was removed from Pedercini's site after a point of order in the Italian Parliament called "Countermeasures to the religions' offences".[7]

In April 2009, Pedercini initially bowed to complaints from the Organisation of the Islamic Conference by removing Faith Fighter from their site,[8] but later put up a new version that gives the player the choice between a full and a censored version. Pedercini has later started producing a mock sequel that sarcastically pretends to promote religious pluralism and tolerance.[9] Both games have since been put back on the website.

In September 2011, Pedercini released a game entitled Phone Story for smartphones that was promptly banned from the Apple iTunes Store.[10] Phone Story focused on what Pedercini considered the "dark side" of smartphone manufacturing. When Apple banned the game, he released the game for the Android market.

For the tenth anniversary of Molleindustria, the original manifesto was translated into English for the first time.[11]

Games

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. J. Patrick Williams, Jonas Heide Smith (2007) The players' realm: studies on the culture of video games and gaming p.247 "these are games that, for example, seek to make trenchant criticisms of ever-more flexible labour markets and to visualise and make playable the claims of queer theory about the mutability of sexual identity, pleasure and desire. Molleindustria explicitly position their work in opposition to the mainstream industry, which they see as having been invaded by global entertainment giants, and position their work alongside broader indymedia movements."}
  2. Book: Grindon, Gavin . 2008 . Aesthetics and Radical Politics . 36 . Cambridge Scholars . 9781847189790 . Cresswell suggests the two political objectives of Night discourse/culture jamming/guerrilla semiotics are [...]. The 'simple, meaningful graphics' of Molleindustria discussed in this paper, and the similar approaches of scratchware and others53, do much the same in relation to the games industry. .
  3. Web site: Interview: Paolo Pedercini . GAME VIDEO/ART. A SURVEY . 3 June 2016 . Paolo Pedercini (b. 1981, Italy) lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and teaches an experimental game design class at Carnegie Mellon University. He often works under the project name “molleindustria” producing video games addressing various social issues such as environmentalism, food politics, labor and gender..
  4. Web site: orgasm-simulator . molleindustry.org . CC BY-NC 3.0 US .
  5. Web site: run jesus run . molleindustria.org . CC BY-SA-NC 3.0 US .
  6. Web site: Molleindustria Manifesto (2003) – Molleindustria. 14 December 2013 .
  7. Web site: Operation Pedopriest: Banned . https://web.archive.org/web/20090430101854/http://www.ecopolis.org/operation-pedopriest-banned/ . 30 April 2009 . ecopolis.org .
  8. Web site: Jesus vs. Mohammed? Video Game Upsets Islamic Group . . . 14 January 2014 . 25 August 2022 .
  9. Web site: Nixed 'Faith Fighter' Game Gets Lovey-Dovey Sequel . .
  10. News: September 15, 2011 . Infamous Anti-iPhone Game Goes To Android . 25 April 2017. . Parmy . Olson.
  11. Web site: Molleindustria Manifesto (2003) – Molleindustria. 14 December 2013 .
  12. Web site: Pedercini . Paolo . Oiligarchy Postmortem . molleindustria.org . 23 November 2022.
  13. Web site: To my favorite sinner.
  14. Web site: IndieCade 2012 winners announced, Unmanned takes the top prize . 28 February 2016 . . Matulef . Jeffrey . 12 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160228143330/http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2012-10-12-indiecade-2012-winners-announced-unmanned-takes-the-top-prize . 28 February 2016 . live .
  15. News: The Best Amendment Indie Game Takes on the NRA . Ryan Rigney . . 2013-04-05 . 2013-06-02.
  16. Web site: Poking fun at trademark disputes with Trademarkville . Tracey Lien . . 2014-03-04 . 2014-03-06.
  17. Web site: The game we didn't know we needed to survive this primary season . Martens . Todd . 28 February 2020 . . 6 August 2020.