<doi_batch xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://www.crossref.org/schema/5.3.1" xmlns:jats="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.crossref.org/schema/5.3.1 https://www.crossref.org/schemas/crossref5.3.1.xsd" version="5.3.1"><head><doi_batch_id>episciences.org_4609_20260517170418120</doi_batch_id><timestamp>20260517170418120</timestamp><depositor><depositor_name>episciences.org</depositor_name><email_address>raphael.tournoy+crossrefapi@ccsd.cnrs.fr</email_address></depositor><registrant>episciences.org</registrant></head><body><journal><journal_metadata language="en"><full_title>ElPub - ELectronic PUBlishing</full_title><doi_data><doi>10.46298/journals/elpub</doi><resource>http://elpub.episciences.org</resource></doi_data></journal_metadata><journal_issue><publication_date media_type="online"><month>06</month><day>20</day><year>2018</year></publication_date><journal_volume><volume>Connecting the Knowledge...</volume></journal_volume><issue>Long Papers</issue></journal_issue><journal_article publication_type="full_text" language="en"><titles><title>Game not Over: End-User Programming and Game System Modding as Models for Extending Community Engagement</title></titles><contributors><person_name sequence="first" contributor_role="author"><given_name>Matthew</given_name><surname>Wells</surname><affiliations><institution><institution_name>Ryerson University [Toronto]</institution_name><institution_id type="ror">https://ror.org/03dbr7087</institution_id></institution></affiliations></person_name></contributors><jats:abstract><jats:p xml:lang="en">In certain digital gaming subcultures, specific games are extended and enhanced by players who create “mods”, or modifications, that add new artwork, new scenarios, and even new rules. “Modders” meet in online communities that foster engagement through the discussion and self-publication of mods, and these can keep interest in a given game going years after it is released. Most importantly, modding allows players to challenge and subvert dominant discourses, and to foster cultures of inclusivity. These DIY efforts could be adapted by academic publishers, particularly those focused on design research, to encourage sustained engagement with scholarly materials. This article discusses the history of modding, provides examples, and sketches one online modding community in detail. It then makes the argument that modding is a form of end-user engagement of the sort advocated by scholars such as Gerald Fischer, and compares modding to other online academic publishing efforts, such as webtexts.</jats:p></jats:abstract><publication_date media_type="online"><month>06</month><day>20</day><year>2018</year></publication_date><acceptance_date media_type="online"><month>06</month><day>20</day><year>2018</year></acceptance_date><publisher_item><item_number item_number_type="article_number">4609</item_number></publisher_item><program xmlns="http://www.crossref.org/AccessIndicators.xsd" name="AccessIndicators"><free_to_read start_date="2018-06-20"/><license_ref applies_to="am" start_date="2018-06-20">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</license_ref><license_ref applies_to="vor" start_date="2018-06-20">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</license_ref><license_ref applies_to="tdm" start_date="2018-06-20">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</license_ref></program><program xmlns="http://www.crossref.org/relations.xsd"><related_item><intra_work_relation identifier-type="uri" relationship-type="isSameAs">https://hal.science/hal-01816719v1</intra_work_relation></related_item></program><doi_data><doi>10.4000/proceedings.elpub.2018.21</doi><resource>http://elpub.episciences.org/4609</resource><collection property="crawler-based"><item crawler="iParadigms"><resource>https://hal.science/hal-01816719v1/document</resource></item></collection><collection property="text-mining"><item><resource mime_type="application/pdf">https://hal.science/hal-01816719v1/document</resource></item></collection></doi_data></journal_article></journal></body></doi_batch>