Removing Gamification: A Research Agenda
This addresses a gap in gamification research for designers and researchers, but it is incremental as it reviews existing work and proposes an agenda.
The paper tackles the lack of consensus on the effects of removing gamification from interactive systems, finding mixed positive and negative impacts but concluding that methodological issues prevent firm conclusions.
The effect of removing gamification elements from interactive systems has been a long-standing question in gamification research. Early work and foundational theories raised concerns about the endurance of positive effects and the emergence of negative ones. Yet, nearly a decade later, no work to date has sought consensus on these matters. Here, I offer a rapid review on the state of the art and what is known about the impact of removing gamification. A small corpus of 8 papers published between 2012 and 2020 were found. Findings suggest a mix of positive and negative effects related to removing gamification. Significantly, insufficient reporting, methodological weaknesses, limited measures, and superficial interpretations of "negative" results prevent firm conclusions. I offer a research agenda towards better understanding the nature of gamification removal. I end with a call for empirical and theoretical work on illuminating the effects that may linger after systems are un-gamified.