Freeplay Independent Games Festival

Freeplay Independent Games Festival
The Freeplay 2018 logo
The Freeplay 2018 logo
The Freeplay 2019 logo.
The 2018 Freeplay visual identity art
StatusActive
GenreIndependent video game development
FrequencyAnnually
Location(s)Melbourne, Victoria
CountryAustralia
Years active20
Established21 May 2004 (2004-05-21)
FounderKatharine Neil & Marcus Westbury
Most recent5 October 2023 (2023-10-05)
Previous eventParallels (2023)
Next event2024 Awards
Participants50+
Attendance500+
Sponsors
Websitefreeplay.net.au

The Freeplay Independent Games Festival is Australia's longest-running and largest independent games festival, first established in 2004.[1] The Festival celebrates fringe artists and game makers, and highlights grassroots developers and art games. It gathers artists, designers, programmers, writers, gamers, creators, games critics, games academics and students to celebrate the art form of independent games and the culture around them.

Freeplay is funded primarily through arts grants. Past and present sponsors include Australia Council for the Arts, Film Victoria, Victoria State Government, City of Melbourne, Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI), and RMIT University.

With the aim of celebrating game making as arts practice, Freeplay has consistently aligned itself with the arts, and over the years has partnered with arts organisations such as Australian Centre for the Moving Image, State Library Victoria, Next Wave Festival, Wheeler Centre, Federation Square, Arts Centre Melbourne, National Gallery of Victoria, City of Melbourne, Arts House, National Young Writers' Festival, and more.[2]

The current director of Freeplay is Chad Toprak (2017–).[3] Previous directors have included Dan Golding (2014–2017),[4] Katie Williams and Harry Lee Shang Lun (2013–2014),[5] Paul Callaghan and Eve Penford-Dennis (2008–2012).[6] The founding directors of Freeplay were Katherine Neil and Marcus Westbury.[7]

  1. ^ "Free Play: NextWave Independent Game Developer Conference - tsumea". Tsumea.com.
  2. ^ "About Freeplay". Freeplay Independent Games Festival. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  3. ^ "A very Freeplay update: New director and suite of events for 2017-18". Freeplay Independent Games Festival. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  4. ^ Dominguez, James 'DexX' (23 October 2014). "Freeplay, Australia's premier indie games festival, gets a shake-up". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  5. ^ "INTERVIEW: Katie Williams and Harry Lee, the new directors of the Freeplay Independent Games Festival". Game On. 12 December 2012. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  6. ^ "More Freeplay coming soon". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 February 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  7. ^ "The Age Blogs: Screen Play". blogs.theage.com.au. Retrieved 18 September 2019.