No half-assed performance: how playing with a live crowd turns video games into performance art

I just saw this crazy gaming thingy with 70 players in a theatre 🤯. The gameplay was all about teamwork, kinda like trying to get a bunch of people on the same page during a meeting 📅. It's wild how the crowd's input affected the game - some people were like experts and others were clueless 🤷‍♂️. But it worked! The collective effort created this chaotic yet awesome experience 🔥. I think more games should try to incorporate that kind of mass participation 👥. Maybe we can even learn something from it about working together in the real world 💡.
 
I gotta say, this game thing is kinda cool, I guess 😊. The way they got 70 people in one place to play together as one entity is pretty wild. But at the same time, it's like, whoa, that many opinions can be overwhelming, you know? Like when there are too many cooks in the kitchen 🤯. It's like, some decisions are better left to just one person. Still, I think it's a dope idea to get people more involved and stuff, but maybe they could've done it without all the chaos 🙄. Anyways, it was an interesting experiment and all that, so yeah... 👍
 
omg i loved watching this asses.masses game live it was so cool how everyone worked together as a team 🤩 they had to communicate like engineers and use problem solving skills it made me think if we had more interactive experiences in gaming we'd be even more engaged and connected with each other 🌐 the game designers did an amazing job of making it more than just a fun show but also a thought-provoking experiment on collaboration 💡
 
I gotta say, I just played this crazy game with 70 people at our local gaming meetup 🤯... anyway, what really blew my mind was how some guy who just joined in mid-game had no idea what was going on and we all just started throwing out random engineering terms like "torque" and stuff. The person controlling the donkeys on stage would ask for input and everyone's opinion mattered – it was wild! 🤪 And I love how they said it wasn't just about playing, but about having this collective conversation with other people. It felt so much more engaging than watching a solo streamer play... now that's what I'm talking about 💻
 
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