Instead of dry policy papers, the UN issues “Epic Quests.” Example: Quest: “Clean the Gyre” (Ocean plastic). Objective: Remove 10M kg plastic. Reward: Tax incentives + in-game cosmetic “Ocean Guardian” title. Time limit: 180 days. 5. Case Study Simulation: Carbon Neutrality by 2040
“Gaming All World” is not a naive call to turn everything into a Nintendo cartridge. Rather, it is a recognition that humanity already plays—we play status games, wealth games, and war games. The proposal here is to consciously redesign the rules. By aligning the feedback loops of global systems with the motivational architecture of games, we might achieve what the UN Charter could not: mass, joyful, sustained cooperation. gaming all world
2.1 Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Motivation Self-Determination Theory (Deci & Ryan) posits that humans are motivated by autonomy, competence, and relatedness. Modern games satisfy all three. Global governance fails to provide immediate feedback (competence) or relatable narratives (relatedness). GAW bridges this gap. Instead of dry policy papers, the UN issues “Epic Quests
As the 21st century faces poly-crises—climate change, resource scarcity, political polarization, and pandemic management—traditional top-down governance models have proven slow and unengaging. This paper proposes the concept of “Gaming All World” (GAW): the systematic application of game mechanics (points, leaderboards, narratives, and feedback loops) to real-world global systems. Drawing from gamification theory, behavioral economics, and massive multiplayer online (MMO) game design, this paper argues that transforming global participation into a structured game could unlock unprecedented human cooperation. We analyze existing prototypes (e.g., Foldit, EVE Online’s economy, and carbon-tracking apps) and propose a scalable architecture for a “World Game.” Finally, we address ethical risks, including surveillance capitalism, inequality of access, and the danger of trivializing suffering. Time limit: 180 days
Several real-world projects foreshadow a fully gamed world:
[Generated for Academic Purposes] Date: April 17, 2026
2.2 The Magic Circle Johan Huizinga’s Homo Ludens described play as occurring within a “magic circle”—a temporary world with its own rules. GAW proposes expanding that circle to encompass Earth. If carbon emissions are reframed as “negative points” and reforestation as “territory capture,” the abstract becomes actionable.