Jane McGonigal's No. 1 dream is to see a game developer win a Nobel Peace Prize. And while her new book, Reality is Broken: Why Games Make Us Better and How They Can Change the World, doesn't provide a detailed road map to the award, it draws attention to a number of essential signposts pointing the way. Read on for a review of McGonigal's book and a preview of some of her upcoming projects designed to make our lives just a little bit better.

By Michael Andersen, originally posted at ARGNet

In 2008, Jane McGonigal delivered a rant at the Game Developer's Conference entitled "Reality is Broken" that galvanized developers into tackling real-life problems. McGonigal has since refined her thesis through presentations delivered at venues ranging from South by Southwest to TED.

She has also put her theories to practical use with alternate reality games and interactive experiences including The Lost Ring, Top Secret Dance Off, Cryptozoo, and Evoke. Jane has taught audiences how to do the Soulja Boy dance, snuck on stage for a Flynn Lives event, and used game mechanics to help recover from a concussion.

McGonigal's new book, Reality is Broken: Why Games Make us Better and How they Can Change the World, hits bookstores on Jan. 20, and expands upon the central point of her presentations: reality is broken, because games do a better job of making us happy. Rather than attacking games as an escapist outlet for avoiding real-world troubles, why don't we subvert those game mechanics to make the world a better place?

The book draws upon a healthy mix of psychological research isolating specific tactics for induce happiness ("happiness hacks") alongside practical examples of those tactics utilized in both traditional and "serious" game design. The net result? A list of 14 "fixes" that can help readers improve their lives through play.

The book did a superb job of outlining concrete examples of why we like games in the first place, and how we can transform that interest into something that will make our lives and the lives of others better. While reading through the book, I often found myself cheering along with the "epic wins" documented in the book, ready to proudly declare, "We can do this! We can make the world better, if only a little bit!"

Reading this book about happiness feels good. Don't be surprised if you catch yourself grinning from ear to ear a few times each chapter.

The book is structured in three sections: The first delves into what makes us happy, the second embraces the notion of entering alternate realities, and the third addresses the challenges and potential embodied in massive collaborative projects.

Each section could easily be a book in its own right, with the first section providing a game developer's how-to guide that should be on every development team's required reading list, explaining key concepts like flow and failure in easily digestible language. Another section addresses how massively collaborative projects like Wikipedia and Folding@Home use gaming elements to achieve "epic wins."

The section that is most likely relevant to ARGNet readers addresses alternate reality games, offering a bold new definition for the term that embraces everything from online work-management systems like Chore Wars to new educational models like the one implemented at New York City charter school Quest to Learn.

McGonigal defines this new breed of alternate reality game as anti-escapist games: games played out in a real-world context that improve our lives. As videogame theorist Ian Bogost noted in his review, this is a bold redefinition that might help the genre break out into the mainstream.

The definition captures the imagination and summarizes much of what I personally find to be compelling in alternate reality games. As an operative definition, however, it leaves much to be desired, as it potentially rebrands everything from the game of tag to chess as an alternate reality game.

A much more practical definition can be found later in the book, where McGonigal defines narrative ARGs as games that "use multimedia storytelling – video, text, photographs, audio, and even graphic novels – to weave real-world game missions into a compelling fiction that plays out over weeks, months, or even years."

Serious games that attempt to do more than activate positive emotions and serve as "happiness hacks" still have a long way to go, as they try to find the balance between fun and function. And I remain skeptical towards applying gamification tactics to complex problems that are resistant to game designer attempts to reduce goals to concrete action steps.

However, Reality is Broken provides a much-needed lexicon for continuing the development process, and McGonigal's continued explorations into the field will hopefully unveil new tactics to successfully engage the ever-increasing gamer population in world-changing endeavors. After all, failure is part of the discovery process, and on the aggregate level, even modest improvements in everyday life can go a long way towards making the world a better place.

Moving forward, McGonigal has announced the return of a number of her past projects, offering additional opportunities to hone engagement models: Starting next week, groups can apply to experience season one of the World Bank's Evoke, with veterans of the first round serving as mentors for the next. *Top Secret Dance-Off *will also be returning under the umbrella of McGonigal's new company, Social Chocolate.

Super Better, her attempt to gameify her recovery process, is also under development for a formal release. Finally, McGonigal is working with the New York Public Library to put on Find the Future: The Game on May 20, from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m.

Even McGonigal's promotional tour is peppered with gaming elements: On the book's website, Gameful.org is touted as an online hub for gamers and game developers interested in making the world a better place.

The website allows users to level up by interacting with the website and creating games (Level 100 can only be reached by winning a Gameful Award at the site's annual awards) administered by the adorably exuberant Mayor. Each level allows you to level up your own Gameful monster from unhatched egg to one of six different pets.

Speaking engagements will also incorporate game elements, as McGonigal plans on using Groundcrew, one of the games heavily featured in the Reality is Broken book, to spice up her presentations. The book tour includes stops at The Colbert Report (Feb. 3) and South by Southwest Interactive (March 11-15), with locations spanning across the country in both the United States and Canada.