Research on the Multi-dimensional Impact of Novel Tactile Film Materials on the Gaming Experience of Online Game Players
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Abstract
Driven by the advent of the digital intelligence era, online games have revolutionized the gaming landscape by immersing players in hyper-realistic digital worlds. This immersion is facilitated through the integration of advanced digital technologies, highly realistic simulations, and innovative tactile film materials. Consequently, the gaming experience has transcended mere sensory stimulation, evolving into a comprehensive aesthetic enjoyment that engages players on multiple levels. During this transformative process, the identities of players, the spatial dimensions of the game roles, and the modalities of experiential engagement have undergone significant shifts and reconstructions. Collectively, these changes have coalesced to form the distinctive digital aesthetic attributes of online games. Focusing on these attributes, this article delineates its research questions across three pivotal dimensions: the reconstruction of player identities, the generative reconfiguration of game spaces, and the aesthetic recalibration of the gaming experience. The reconstruction of identity primarily manifests the fluidity and transformation of identity precipitated by the innovation of the cyborg body. Meanwhile, the reconstruction of the game space delineates the interplay within the virtual-real-supra-real fields. The game experience, in turn, underscores the interrelationship between the physical body and sensory perceptions of game participants. Interpreting these issues elucidates the identity flux between game participants and game characters, clarifies the metamorphosis of game scenarios, and re-examines the relationships of "people and objects," "people and space," and "people and society" in the digital age, thereby underscoring its significant meaning and value. This is crucial for further expanding the theoretical cognitive boundaries of "human-machine relationships" and catalyzing human "chain-like" thinking regarding the real world, virtual spaces, and the symbiotic relationship between humans and machines.