lafs game design 1 - the structure of games

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THE STRUCTURE OF GAMES Session 2 David Mullich Game Design 1 The Los Angeles Film School

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Session 2 of the Los Angeles Film School's Game Design 1 class.

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Page 1: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

THE STRUCTURE OFGAMES

Session 2

David Mullich

Game Design 1

The Los Angeles Film School

Page 2: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Designer Perspective: Peter Molyneux

G4 Icons Episode #43: Peter Molyneux

Page 3: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

What Is A Game?

A game is FUN!

Duh!

So what’s fun?

Jesse Schell defines “fun” as “pleasure with surprises”.

Page 4: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The Lens of Surprise

Surprise is so basic that we can easily forget about it. Use this lens to fill your game with interesting surprises.

What will surprise players when they play my game?

Does the story in my game have surprises? Do the game rules? The artwork? The technology?

Jesse Schell, Lens #2

Page 5: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The Lens of Fun

Fun is desirable in nearly every game, although sometimes fun defies analysis.

What parts of my game are fun? Why? What parts need to be more fun?

Jesse Schell, Lens #3

Page 6: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Dramatic Elements

Premise Character Story Challenge Play

Page 7: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Immersion

Immersion creates the illusion that you are another person or in another place.

An immersive experience can be achieved through theme, story, character, graphics, and audio.

Page 8: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The Magic Circle

The Magic Circle - How Games Transport Us to New Worlds - Extra Credits

Page 9: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Discussion

How does the Magic Circle relate to Immersion?

What elements of a game create an immersive experience?

Page 10: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The 16 Human Motivators

Dr. Steven Reiss describes 16 basic human motivators and their object of desire:

Motivator Object of Desire

Power Influence

Curiosity Knowledge

Independence Self-reliance

Acceptance Being part of a group

Order Organization

Saving Collecting things

Honor Loyalty to one’s parents, community

Idealism Social justice

Motivator Object of Desire

Social contact Companionship

Family Raising children

Status Social standing

Vengeance Competition, getting even

Romance Sex and beauty

Eating Food

Physical Activity Exercising the body

Tranquility Emotional calm

Page 11: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Motivators in Games

We see many of these motivators satisfied by the games that we play.

Motivator Game

Power Diplomacy

Curiosity Civilization

Independence Oregon Trail

Acceptance Guild Wars 2

Order Tetris

Saving Farmville

Honor Sports

Idealism Social justice

Motivator Game

Social contact Pictionary

Family The Sims

Status World of Warcraft

Vengeance Angry Birds

Romance Leisure Suit Larry

Eating Pac Man

Physical Activity Tag

Tranquility Candy Crush

Page 12: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The Lens of Curiosity

Think about the player’s true motivations – not just what your game has set forth, but the reason the player wants to achieve the goals.

What questions does my game put into the player’s mind? What am I doing to make them care about these

questions? What can I do to make them invent even more questions?

Jesse Schell, Lens #4

Page 14: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Intertainment Taxonomy

"Intertainment" is the class of activities that entertain through their interactive nature

"Interactive stories" are conventional stories with some small interactive element added (Manhole)

"Playthings" are systems that entertain through their response to the player’s actions

"Toys" are playthings without defined goals (SimCity)

Page 15: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Intertainment Taxonomy

"Challenges" are playthings with clearly defined goals

"Puzzles" are challenges with no purposeful opponents (Tetris)

"Conflicts" are challenges with purposeful opponents

"Competitions" are conflicts without impeding action between the competitors

Page 16: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Intertainment Taxonomy

This leaves “games” as interactive entertainment with conflicts in which the players directly interact in such a way as to foil each other’s goals.

Page 17: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

What is a Game?

What Is a Game? - How This Question Limits Our Medium - Extra Credits

Page 18: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Discussion

Why does Extra Credits think “What is a game?” a wrong question to ask?

Do you think it is useful to distinguish between a game and “an interactive experience”?

Page 19: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

1. Draw three dots randomly on a piece of paper. (Choose a player to go first)

2. The first player draws a line from one dot to another dot.

3. Then that player draws a new dot anywhere on that line.

4. The second player also draws a line and a dot.• The new line must go from one dot to another, but no dot can

have more than three lines coming out of it.• The new line cannot cross any other line.• A line can go from the dot back to the same dot so long as it

doesn’t break the “no more than three lines rule.”

5. The player takes turns until one player cannot make a move. The last player to move is the winner.

Page 20: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

1. Players: How many? Any requirements? Special knowledge, roles, etc.?

2. Objective: What is the objective of the game?

3. Procedures: What are the required actions for play?

4. Rules: Are there any limits on player actions? Rules regarding behavior?

5. Conflict: What causes conflict in this game?

6. Boundaries: What are the boundaries of the game? Are they physical? Conceptual?

7. Outcome: What are the potential outcomes of the game?

8. Does the game have any dramatic elements?1. Challenge: What creates challenge in the game?

2. Play: Is there a sense of play within the game?

3. Premise/Character/Story: Are these present in the game?

Page 21: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The Lens of Endogenous Value

Think about your player’s feelings about the items, objectives, and scoring in your game.

What is valuable to the players in my game? How can I make it more valuable to them? What is the relationship between value in the

game and the motivations?

Jesse Schell, Lens #5

Page 22: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

PUZZLE GAMES

Page 23: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Puzzle Games

Extra Credits: Puzzle Games

Page 24: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Puzzles

What are puzzles?

A puzzle is fun.

And it has the right answer.

Unlike a game, a puzzle’s goal is to find a solution, not for one player to win.

Page 25: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Tips For Creating Good Puzzles

You have to design both good levels and good rules (generally, rule design is the harder of the two).

The main challenge is to set the right level of difficulty for your puzzle.

Keep the player in a pleasurably challenging state of flow.

Be creative!

Page 26: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

Principles for Making Good Puzzles1. Make the goal easily understood

2. Make it easy to get started

3. Give a sense of progress

4. Give a sense of solvability

5. Increase difficulty gradually

6. Parallelism (multiple challenges) lets the player rest

7. Pyramid structure (small puzzles build to big one)

8. Give hints

9. Give the answer! (Post the solution someplace)

10. Perceptual shifts are a double-edged sword!Jesse Schell

Page 27: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The Lens of Puzzles

Puzzles make the player stop and think.

What are the puzzles in my game? Should I have more puzzles or less? Why? Which of the ten puzzle principles apply to each of

my puzzles? Do I have any incongruous puzzles? How can I

better integrate them into the game?

Jesse Schell, Lens #3

Page 28: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

The Lens of Problem Solving

Think about the problems your players must solve to succeed at your game.

What problems does my game ask the player to solve?

Are there hidden problems to solve that arise as part of gameplay?

How can my game generate new problems so that players keep coming back?

Jesse Schell, Lens #6

Page 29: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games

1. Download GM Tutorial - Maze Games.zip from the LAFS GD1 website Resources page

2. Create a Maze game

Page 30: LAFS Game Design 1 - The Structure of Games