Simulations
From Gender and Tech Resources
Contents
On the spot simulations
These simulations vary from being as small as one person (knowing about it) as is the case in Simulation: Rewriting history and Simulation: Small change, to small groups of friends helping each other change a story like Simulation: I can't say "no" to larger simulations where people explore shared emotionally loaded events that came up during a retrospective, and can also be folded in as "motives" when coming up in a larger themed simulation such as Simulation: The Alpha Complex.
These types of simulation hardly need props (save maybe for some pillows) but some, especially when done in the context of retrospectives and larger themed simulations require facilitation skills, authenticity, and personal invisibility from its facilitators and moderators. We can have rape, pogrom and even genocide experiences come up, so tread lightly, and have backseat and butterfly facilitators as safety net.
Standalone simulations
These are simulations pre-loaded with an environment, props, and a specific purpose, like in Simulation: Game of Goose where the rules of a well-known "game of life" have been changed to get rid of limiting beliefs about our capacity to work together in the game of life. Games like this can prepare the way for solidarity networks.
Technical concepts
- Simulation: TCP congestion control
- Simulation: Onionland
- Simulation: Garlicland
- Simulation: Mesh network routing