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Fun Robin Burke GAM 224.

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Presentation on theme: "Fun Robin Burke GAM 224."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fun Robin Burke GAM 224

2 Outline Admin Fun / Pleasure Meaning Types of Pleasure Flow
Managing Difficulty Meaning Systems of meaning

3 Admin Play paper handout Due 5/16 Rewrites Due 5/25

4 Play Paper Schemas Thesis should say both Experience Pleasure Meaning
Narrative Simulation Social Play Thesis should say both what schemas preview your findings

5 Fun Important, but vague concept
What makes the player want to play? What makes the player want to keep playing? Not always the same thing for a given game

6 Experience vs Pleasure
what players do (most) to play Fun the pleasurable quality of those experiences

7 Example Soccer Perception Analysis Decision Execution
trajectory of ball trajectory of players Analysis negative space Decision points of attack / defense Execution positioning, dribbling, passing, shooting, blocking, tackling

8 Where is the fun? Being right (cognitive) Being skillful (sensation)
correctly identifying a weakness and exploiting it Being skillful (sensation) correct physical execution Being competitive (contest) winning individual confrontations winning the game Being collaborative (social) communicating well with team members

9 Typologies of pleasure
Fun is a vague concept we want to talk about the pyschological rewards of playing "pleasure" Various ways to analyze these rewards

10 LeBlanc Sensation Fantasy Narrative Challenge Fellowship Discovery
the game engages the senses Fantasy the game lets us play make-believe Narrative the game has interesting characters and compelling drama Challenge we can confront and overcome challenges Fellowship we can build relationships with other people Discovery we discover new things and places Expression we express ourselves Submission we follow blindly

11 Caillois Agon Alea Mimicry Ilinx competitive struggle chance
make-believe Ilinx physical sensation

12 Soccer, revisited Sensation Fantasy Narrative Challenge Fellowship
the feel of the field, the sounds and sights of the players in action Fantasy imagining yourself as Pele, David Beckham or Freddie Adu Narrative the story of the game dramatic moments – the highlight reel Challenge meeting the physical demands of running, blocking and kicking meeting the cognitive demands of offensive and defensive play Fellowship the comradeship of the team Discovery learning new techniques Expression developing a style of play Submission the rituals of the game the kickoff, the corner kick, etc.

13 Asteroids Sensation Fantasy Narrative Challenge Fellowship Discovery
black and white vector drawings Fantasy imagining yourself commanding a space ship Narrative individual dramatic moments Challenge the demands of maneuvering and clearing asteroids the increasing challenge of higher game levels Fellowship not much Discovery Expression Submission

14 FFTA Sensation Fantasy Narrative Challenge Fellowship Discovery
tiny screen annoying music cute drawings Fantasy imagining yourself as a mage or warrior Narrative the unfolding of plot elements leading to the desired return to real life Challenge the demands of managing battles under increasing constraint the demands of managing clan development Fellowship not much Discovery unfolding of different locations in the game world acquisition of new items and new powers Expression Submission the stylized forms of battle the imposition of rules

15 Thunderstorm Sensation Fantasy Narrative Challenge Fellowship
simple drawings throwing the dice Fantasy not much Narrative increased tension with fewer dice the destruction of houses Challenge Fellowship sharing the game activity Discovery Expression Submission the acceptance of random outcome

16 Sources of pleasure Games Video games Because
differ in where the pleasure arises Video games emphasize particular types of challenge cognitive hand-eye coordination emphasize fantasy emphasize narrative Because these capitalize on the advantages of the computer

17 The cost of fun Pleasure is not cheap
high-quality graphics and sound creative stories and vivid dialog thoroughly tested and balanced gameplay mechanics lots of territory to discover all expensive Top game titles are expensive to produce because they try to provide pleasure of all types Focused titles emphasize a subset are criticized for the things they leave out cheaper to make require perfect execution Classic engineering trade-off put development effort where the biggest pleasure pay-off lies

18 Challenge Most important source of pleasure in video games Reasons
in the post-arcade era Reasons suits the computer's strengths easy to make things faster more intense suits the aesthetics of the audience adolescent males

19 Level of Challenge "hide and seek"

20 Difficulty Too hard Too easy game can't be enjoyed game is boring
nothing to learn

21 Quantifying difficulty
Analytical # of choices complexity of decision branching factor complexity of execution Empirical Playtesting

22 Adjusting difficulty new option new opponent / environment
decision-making more complex as long as dominance avoided new opponent / environment more to learn new constraint routine patterns can't be applied

23 Pacing "Pace" of the game speed at which new challenges are introduced
= speed at which player must master each in order to succeed

24 Arcade games primary challenge difficulty adjustments
speed and accuracy of response "button mashing" difficulty adjustments number of targets response speed required cost of error usually continuous increase of difficulty until impossible

25 Example WarioWare

26 Match skills and opportunities
More opportunities than skills player will flounder game becomes overwhelming More skills than opportunities game is limiting player feels confined

27 Mastery When the choices and perceptions become "automatic"
non-deliberative Can only happen when skills are fully learned perceptions correctly trained

28 Path to mastery = repetition
Basic psychology repetition of skill increases performance But how to manage repetition? major concern in game design

29 Repetition Invariant Decomposition Practice Mode
starting level all over Drawback level involves many skills failure in one means need to repeat all Decomposition emphasize new skills as acquired Problem must generate more levels Practice Mode allow player to practice outside of main game

30 Flow "The state in which people are so involved in an activity that nothing else seems to matter; the experience itself is so enjoyable that people will do it even at great cost, for the sheer sake of doing it." Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

31 Flow state Loss of sense of time Intense focus
Responses are fast, continuous and (almost) unconscious Many examples athletes, musicians, surgeons, pilots, soldiers gamers

32 What builds flow? Attention invested in realistic goals
Skills match opportunities for action Skills can be mastered Learning acquisition of skills increased ability to participate shared community / developed commitment

33 Flow as a design goal Present the player with realistic goals
Match skills and affordances Teach skills Have those skills increase level of participation Develop the player's commitment

34 Realistic goals Goal is realistic if it can be accomplished by the player might require acquisition of new skills Player has to adopt the goal and understand that it is possible Level of challenge

35 Meaning (from 4/4) Meaning is created by the interpretation of signifiers in context A game designer creates a new context with new meanings using particular signifiers

36 Systems of meaning Individual signifiers System of signifiers
"hand with red circle" means "disabled" System of signifiers whole set of icons for different status conditions When a new icon appears players has to try to understand what it might mean

37 Play of meaning The way in which the game invites the player to use its system of signs Activities interpreting signs learning new signs looking for signs sometimes inventing signs

38 Play with meaning Sometimes games invite play with meaning
Signs with conventional meaning are subverted dissonance between the conventional meaning and the game's meaning Examples Spin the Bottle a kiss signifies? Grand Theft Auto carjacking signifies?

39 Game Metacommunication
(beyond or behind) The communication about the game as opposed to the communication required in order to play How do we know that we are playing constant stream of communicative acts required to keep play going to signal involvement focus of attention readiness of participation game-appropriate demeanor

40 Monday Narrative Simulation


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