How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4....

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How to Design a Game

Transcript of How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4....

Page 1: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

How to Designa Game

Page 2: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

The Game Design Cycle

1.Draft Genre/Audience

2.Themework

3.Model

4.Abstract

5.Test

6.Balance

7.Revise

Page 3: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

Audience• Education

• Who do they play with?

• How do they obtain games?

• What other games do they play?

• When do they play?

• How much time do they have?

• Affluence

• Geographic location

• What books/movies/music do they like?

• Why do they play games?

Page 4: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

Theme

1.Choose a theme

2.Brainstorm

3a. Select best elements

3.Identify the essence

Step Example Example

James Bond...Secret Agent

Gadgets, laser watch, car chases, seduction, missions, berretta, evil genius, torture, gambling, license to kill, martini, champagne, caviar, exotic locations, save the world, disguise, alias, reparte

•Be the best•Have the best•Surprise everyone with how good you/it is

Page 5: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

Model

• Quantify thematic elements

• Introduce classifications

• Avoid one-offs

• (but exception rules OK)

• Complexity is OK

• Do not attempt to balance now

Size, Health, Weight, Damage, Range, Value, Material, Movement Rate, Location, Attack type, Growth rate...

Flammable, Portable, Extensible, Living, Buoyant, Mountable, ...

Page 6: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

Abstract

• Combine similar properties

• Combine categories

• Remove whole thematic elements

• Board games require more absraction than video games

Page 7: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

• Model accurate units and locations?

• Civilization: No

• Advance Wars: Partly

• Age of Empires: Yes

• Model seasons?

• Harvest Moon: No

Page 8: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

Test• Build prototype (quickly!)

• Record quantifyable aspects

• Note over- and under-used elements

• Debrief players for qualitative aspects

• Focus on positive first

Page 9: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

Don’t take complaints at face value!

“Pistols are too powerful,” might really mean:

“armor is too weak”

“pistols are too available”

“money is too available”

“other options are not powerful enough”

•Balance (1): everyone agrees pistols are balanced.

•Balance (2): as many people think pistols are overpowered as underpowered.

Page 10: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

BalanceTesting identified imbalance. Now solve mathematically for viable structures and value ranges.

Criteria:

• Fairness

• Stability

• Engagement

Page 11: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

Revise• Adjust quantitative factors for balance.

• Can we afford full production on this design?

• Would another theme change better fit the new mechanics?

• Is there a more appropriate target audience?

• Is there too little, or too much complexity?

Page 12: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

How to Design Anything

Page 13: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

The Game Design Cycle

1.Draft genre/audience

2.Choose theme

3.Model

4.Abstract

5.Test

6.Analyze

7.Revise

Page 14: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

The Design Cycle

1.Draft requirements

2.Select elements

3.Model

4.Abstract

5.Test

6.Analyze

7.Revise

Page 15: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

The Engineering Cycle

1.Draft requirements

2.Choose broad form

3.Model forces

4.Create subsystems

5.Build prototype

6.Analyze prototype

7.Revise

Page 16: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

The Painting Cycle

1.Draft subject, medium

2.Preliminary sketches

3.Compose elements

4.Control emphasis

5.Rough in

6.Critique

7.Revise

Page 17: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

The Software Cycle

1.Draft requirements

2.Choose features

3.Model, choose paradigm

4.Create APIs

5.Test

6.Profile and Debug

7.Patch

Page 18: How to Design a Game. The Game Design Cycle 1. Draft Genre/Audience 2. Themework 3. Model 4. Abstract 5. Test 6. Balance 7. Revise.

The Writing Cycle

1.Choose audience, form

2.Brainstorm world

3.Sketch plot and characters

4.Remove detail

5.Draft and solicit feedback

6.Analysis and editor feedback

7.Author editing