[games_access] list with free accessible games

Ian Hamilton i_h at hotmail.com
Sun Sep 29 14:06:02 EDT 2013


The best example of this is Applevis. They have a fairly exhaustive list of which iOS games are to some degree vision impairment accessible. You can filter the list by degree of accessibility, and all by whether or not the games are free.

http://www.applevis.com/ios-app-directory/games

They only have a small number of games to contend with and have a large community submitting and evaluating games. 

You're talking about an up to date (ie complete) list of all accessible games though, which is a little different.

Every game ever released is accessible to some groups, and no game ever released can be 100% accessible to everyone. 

So if you want something up to date, you would need a list of every game ever released, together with an accessibility evaluation of them all, which is not possible, especially not by an individual or small group of people.

The closest you could get would be Applevis' approach, a list compiled by a large community of disabled gamers, covering all types of impairment. It would basically mean something like TripAdvisor.

Unfortunately though that community does not currently exist, the existing communities are divided by types of impairment, and some of the most common impairments (such as colour blindness or low reading age) do not have communities at all.

If you just wanted to research a selection, a few examples of free games that were suitable for various different impairments, I'm sure you could do that, but for you to maintain something exhaustive and up to date isn't realistic.

There is another way though, app/game stores.

Indiecity lists a range of accessibility features, and Steam have made a step towards it now too, showing if a game has subtitles and what languages they are available in. Apple now have a very limited single page of apps that are useful for various different impairments.

The next step on is to make them into filters.

If that was done, if there was a mechanism for developers to be able to state which accessibility considerations / audience types applied to their game, and gamers could actually search based on those criteria (eg. show me which games are free and colour blind friendly) then what you are proposing will have been achieved, but with zero effort needed for compiling or maintaining lists... It would all be taken care of automatically, using data supplied by the developers themselves.

Ian


Ian

-------------------

Hello, 

can we provide a list with free accessible games? 
That could be very useful for other organization. 

For example we have one central list and other can 
link to this page. We can update it and it will 
be up to date. 

We need also the information if the games are free. 
Some projects do not have much money. 

Regards, 
Sandra 


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