by abduzeedo
Play the System is a new book by Heike Grebin from Slanted Publishers exploring parametric design as a method for generating visual systems through algorithms and rules.
Parametric design has been reshaping how graphic designers think about process. Instead of making individual decisions for each element, designers set up systems and let rules do the work. Play the System, published by Slanted Publishers and edited by Heike Grebin, gathers a broad range of practitioners to examine what that shift means for the field. The book treats parametric design not as a technical specialty but as a fundamental rethinking of authorship in visual communication.
The contributors span a wide range of approaches to parametric design. Luna Maurer and Anja Groten bring perspectives on rule-based systems and collective practice. Frieder Nake, a pioneer of algorithmic art since the 1960s, contributes historical context that anchors the discussion. Tom Bieling adds critical theory to the mix. Together they argue that parametric design is not a shortcut but a different kind of creative engagement, one that demands rigor in defining the system before a single form is produced.

Parametric Design as System Thinking
The book arrives with a companion website at www.play-the-system.xyz, which extends the conversation beyond print. That pairing reflects the parametric design ethos itself: the book is one output of a larger system, not a closed artifact. Readers can explore additional projects, documentation, and case studies that expand on what the printed pages can hold.

What makes Play the System worth attention is its refusal to be only a technical manual. The writing engages with aesthetics, ethics, and politics of parametric design. Who controls the system? What assumptions get baked into the rules? These questions sit alongside the practical examples of grid systems, type generators, and algorithmic layout tools.

Play the System is available directly from Slanted Publishers. The companion site play-the-system.xyz provides extended materials and project documentation.