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The emotional experiences associated with Fantasy Football

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-21, 10:05 authored by Luke Wilkins, Ross Dowsett, Zoella Zaborski, Peter M. Allen

The growth of fantasy football has been rapid over the last decade, yet surprisingly, very little is understood about the emotional experiences associated with playing the game. The present study utilized the Multidimensional Emotion Questionnaire to measure the emotions of 1,932 fantasy football players categorized as having either low, low-to-moderate, moderate-to-high, or high engagement with the game. Kruskal-Wallis tests followed by Dunn’s post-hoc tests found a very consistent pattern of emotional response characteristics (frequency, intensity, duration, and regulation) increasing in line with level of engagement (i.e., from fewest in low engagement players to most in high engagement players). Across the sample as a whole, paired-samples t-tests found positive emotions to be greater than negative emotions for frequency, intensity, and duration, but not regulation. These results can be used by stakeholders to optimize the playing experience and tailor the marketing of fantasy sports games.

History

Publication title

Sport Marketing Quarterly

ISSN

1557-2528

Publisher

West Virginia University

File version

  • Accepted version

Affiliated with

  • Vision and Eye Research Institute (VERI) Outputs

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