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Analyzing the Data on BoardGameGeek

Introduction

This project is about analyzing the data on board games available on BoardGameGeek.

The analysis is divided into three parts and there is (will be) a short post on my blog for every one of them.

Collecting the Data

At the time of the collection (May 2018) there is no way to download the data for all board games at once. When using the API of BoardGameGeek we have to specify the board games we want to gather data on. So the first step is to create a list of all board games that we want to gather data on.

We can create such a list by making use of the Advanced Search on BGG. This search is able to return a list of all board games that satisfy our search criteria, but it is limited to 50 pages of results so we cannot retrieve all at once and have to apply filters such that the results do not reach 50 pages. We can achieve this by searching on a year by year basis or at most include two years at once.

Before we start, we can define search parameters to filter the board games we want data on. In this case we require board games to have at least 20 votes regarding the rating or we will not include it. This is to exclude homebrew games, unreleased and unknown games. Basically to make the numbers more manageable while losing not much information.

So we will download the results of the Advanced Search for every year of interest (1990 to 2018) and we store the IDs of the board games in a file. Later on we can iterate through this file (i.e., every board game ID) to download all the data via the API.

The first step in collecting is to create the list of board game ids to download data on. This is done with the fetch_board_game_ids.py script where only START_YEAR and END_YEAR have to be specified. The script will basically enter two years at a time into the advanced search along with the parameters and store all the resulting board game ids in a file. For more information see data_collection/fetch_ids.

The communication with the BGG API is handled in data_collection/fetch_data. In there boardgames.py is the API access point for general information on a given board game id, plays.py returns the total number of plays for a given board game id (this information is already used in boardgames.py) and ratings.py returns the ratings breakdown of a board game id. The ratings breakdown is a list of number of votes for 10 points, the number of votes for 9 points, and so on. Basically the data of the histogram on any ratings page of any board game (e.g., https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/174430/gloomhaven/ratings) .

The actual download and storage in the database is done with the script download_board_game_database.py and it makes use of the functions mentioned above. Warning, the download is very slow due to the rate limitations (and maybe due to the implementation).

Storing the Data

The data is being stored in a SQLite database. The database I used is located in data/database/data_2018-05-10.db and it is based on the list of ids located in data/ids/ids_1990-to-2018_min-20_2018-05-07.

Here are examples of the tables that are being used:

  • boardgames: id on BGG, name, year, rating, weight, #votes, #plays, etc.
  • categories: id on BGG, name
  • categories_to_boardgames: N:M relation of categories and boardgames
  • mechanics: id on BGG, name
  • mechanics_to_boardgames : N:M relation of mechanics and boardgames
  • and some more, but the above are the most important ones

For more information either refer to data_collection/database/tables.py or database_schema.png.

Part One - Growth over Time and Kickstarter

The corresponding blog post is available here.

The first part is divided into the following topics:

  1. The Rise of Board Games
  2. The Influence of Kickstarter
  3. The Categories of the Board Games on Kickstarter
  4. Are the Board Games on Kickstarter better?

For every topic, there is corresponding Jupyter Notebook in part_one/.

Part Two - A Network Visualization of the Board Game Categories

The corresponding blog post is available here.

This part uses Gephi and their Force Atlas 2 algorithm to create a network visualization of the board game categories, where every node is a category and the edge weight between two categories indicates how often both categories co-occur in board games.

The script in part_two/create_nodes_and_edges.py was used to create the node list and the edge list for further usage in Gephi. The node list and edge list I used in my blog are available at part_two/data/. Finally, the corresponding project files for Gephi and the exported graph files are available at part_two/gephi/.

The filters I used in Gephi were the following (for some reason the values are not saved):

  • Removal of edges with a weight less than 15.0
  • Removal of nodes that have a count value of less than 100

Part Three - A Network Visualization using Board Games

The corresponding blog post is available here.

This part is based on part two and applies the concept of a network visualization to board games in order to find similar board games to a given board game.

The script in part_three/create_board_game_nodes_and_edges.py is used to create the node list and the edge list for further usage in Gephi. Again, the node list and edge list I used in my blog are available at part_three/data/ and the graph-related files are located in part_three/gephi/.

Special Thanks

Special thanks to Alex Olteanu who wrote a tutorial on creating plots in the style of FiveThirtyEight. The plots created in this project are based on his tutorial.

Also special thanks to David Kriesel and his work on reverse engineering the german news website Spiegel Online. His work served as inspiration for this project and the network visualization on the board game categories is based on his network visualization of the news keywords and their relationships. If you understand german, I highly recommend you to check it out.

Finally, special thanks to Raphaël Velt and all the contributors to his JavaScript GEXF Viewer for Gephi. It's an awesome tool to display the graphs in the browser.

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