يحاول ذهب - حر
How London is setting the gaming world alight
April 10, 2024
|Evening Standard
Stull think gaming is a culturally worthless pastime? Think again, says Vicky Jessop in the UK, it brings in more revenue than both music and film, and the capital’s at the heart of the creativity
-
OVER the next fortnight, London will be the centre of the gaming world. Some 100,000 visitors and 400 developers will attend the London Games Festival to experience the most exciting new releases, meet investors who might just fund their great ideas and find the next big thing.
"All of them are here to see why London has become Europe's biggest hub for games, and how we're on track to become the games capital of the world," says Michael French, the festival's director.
For a global powerhouse of a city, gaming (which encompasses both consoles and mobile gaming) always used to be a surprising blindspot in our cultural scene. But all that is changing, as will be demonstrated at the festival, which is backed by the Mayor's Office.
"London always had a generally good local games scene but in the last decade it has doubled in size," adds French. "No other global hub seems to have embraced games the way London has." That goes both for the number of studios creating them to the way the capital has influenced massive titles like Call of Duty to Assassin's Creed. From developers, to players, from exhibitions like the Barbican's Game On to the gaming bars that are springing up everywhere, London is embracing video games like never before.
Gone are the days where the industry was dismissed as the culturally worthless pursuit of teenage boys. In the UK, gaming brings in more revenue than both music and film - the industry is worth around £7 billion each year, according to trade body UK Interactive Entertainment. "There aren't that many industries that the UK can genuinely say 'we're towards the top of the pile here," says Daniel Gray, chief creative officer at London-based studio us two.
هذه القصة من طبعة April 10, 2024 من Evening Standard.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Evening Standard
The London Standard
The philosopher who says big tech has got it wrong on superintelligence
Where does science end and philosophy begin?
2 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
The bitter battle over the future of Truman Brewery
A £500m redevelopment plan is pitting Labour's data-centre ambitions against Brick Lane's heritage and a desperate need for housing — it's a political powder keg.
5 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Goldin's family album is as radical as ever
Diaries are irresistible to the nosy, an artist's one even more so. They are portals into another person's life in another time.
3 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Bathroom confidential: inside the calming sanctums of London's top hair and beauty experts
Fancy your own private ritual space at home? Then take a few tips from these masters of elegant self-care.
6 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Revival of an American classic is a luridly weird study in power dynamics
A study of two damaged brothers whose lives are disrupted by an outsider, Lyle Kessler's blend of absurdism and realism could be a Philadelphia-set companion to Pinter's The Caretaker.
1 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Ex-tennis star Andy Murray celebrates at Nobu, shops at Whole Foods and dates at... McDonald's
The Tube has become so much easier for me now people don't look up from their phones
3 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
London's hottest postcodes
THE NEIGHBOURHOODS WHERE DEMAND FOR HOMES IS AT FEVER PITCH. BY ANNA WHITE
3 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
How to style out your great winter escape
Whether it's swimming, skiing or sandalling, here's every label you need to know for a super-chic holiday wardrobe update
3 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
Pilates queen Bryony Deery
The mind-body expert has a morning ritual, but with soundbaths and sleep supplements her evening routine is where it gets serious
3 mins
January 15, 2026
The London Standard
My adult gap year changed my life — I fell in love with the whole crazy world again
didn't imagine I'd meet the man I would marry in a queue for the long drop on the side of a mountain in Peru.
4 mins
January 15, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
