The Honest Broker Podcast

The Philosopher of Games

Feb 12, 2026
C. Thi Nguyen, associate professor studying philosophy of games and gamification. He discusses why many games are carefully designed to be fun. He contrasts cozy games with brutal roguelikes and links challenge to attention and learning. He explores how metrics and rankings simplify values, how gamification can harm institutions, and alternatives in indie and tabletop design.
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INSIGHT

Numbers Trade Context For Transferability

  • Theodore Porter explains quantification's appeal: numbers travel across contexts by stripping context and enabling aggregation.
  • Nguyen uses grading as an example: qualitative feedback carries nuance but doesn't aggregate for distant administrators.
ANECDOTE

How Legibility Strips Local Meaning

  • Jared cites James C. Scott's example of a Welsh naming system being useless in English courts, forcing a last name assignment.
  • This shows how state legibility strips rich local context to create standard records.
INSIGHT

Bureaucratic Clarity Crowds Out Intangibles

  • Public institutions favor simple measures (like lives saved) because they're defensible and travelable, crowding out intangibles like tradition or joy.
  • Nguyen warns that bureaucratic abstractability has become our de facto notion of reality.
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