Hello.
I am working on a social card game targeting children with deafness, and was hoping that the users of this forum might be so kind as to answer a couple general questions about sign language. I have had very little exposure to deaf culture and know practically nothing about sign language, so I really apologize in case my ignorance causes my questions to read unreasonable or inappropriate. That being said, here is what I'm trying to find out:
1. How does the players' (shared) knowledge of a sign language affect the experience of a game like charades, where miming is allowed but not signing or speaking? Is it more difficult for someone fluent in a sign language to avoid "accidentally" signing when miming a character/situation?
2. To what extent would it remain possible to sign, if the game requires that one's hands are clenched into fists throughout the game round? Could this type of a challenge, in theory, work as a fun game mechanic?
3. What might be a reasonable time limit in which to require a player that knows sign language to "explain" through miming (without signing) a situation consisting of a random place, character and an action, like, for example "a cat is dancing in a spaceship"?
Thank you for your time, and, once again, my apologies if the questions seem ridiculous...
I am working on a social card game targeting children with deafness, and was hoping that the users of this forum might be so kind as to answer a couple general questions about sign language. I have had very little exposure to deaf culture and know practically nothing about sign language, so I really apologize in case my ignorance causes my questions to read unreasonable or inappropriate. That being said, here is what I'm trying to find out:
1. How does the players' (shared) knowledge of a sign language affect the experience of a game like charades, where miming is allowed but not signing or speaking? Is it more difficult for someone fluent in a sign language to avoid "accidentally" signing when miming a character/situation?
2. To what extent would it remain possible to sign, if the game requires that one's hands are clenched into fists throughout the game round? Could this type of a challenge, in theory, work as a fun game mechanic?
3. What might be a reasonable time limit in which to require a player that knows sign language to "explain" through miming (without signing) a situation consisting of a random place, character and an action, like, for example "a cat is dancing in a spaceship"?
Thank you for your time, and, once again, my apologies if the questions seem ridiculous...
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