Global Game Jam Demo Day 2019 turnout at Microsoft, New York City

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Why Every Game Developer should take part in Game Jams

Game Jams level up your game creation skills. Period.

Dusk Sharp

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If you have been a game developer for some stretch of time, you most likely know what a “game jam” is. Game Jams are the game developer’s hack-a-thon — you are given a time constraint, and usually a thematic or mechanics constraint, and you must create a game, prototype, tool, or other misc. interactive component. Occasionally the games are rated, and winners receive a small prize. Entry to game jams is almost always free!

One of the biggest game jams is the Global Game Jam. Every year during the early weeks of the year, developers around the world spend one weekend developing a game against a short prompt. In 2019, Global Game Jam had 47,009 participants in 113 countries. 9,010 games were made at 860 locations — its quite an amazing result!

What teams create in game jams is often spectacular, especially given the short time frame (most game jams last a week, some last as long as a few months, and as short as a few hours). If this is the case, why do gamers rarely hear about these excellent games? Due to the lack of volume boosting for game jams, it’s hard to convince professional and freelance developers to take time from their ongoing projects to compete in game jams.

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