Difference between revisions of "Tools"
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=== Can Instantiate === | === Can Instantiate === | ||
[[Actions Have Diegetically Social Consequences]], | [[Actions Have Diegetically Social Consequences]], | ||
+ | [[Aim & Shoot]], | ||
[[Buffs]], | [[Buffs]], | ||
[[Combos]], | [[Combos]], | ||
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==== with [[Cooldown]] ==== | ==== with [[Cooldown]] ==== | ||
− | [[Risk/Reward]] | + | [[Risk/Reward]] |
=== Can Modulate === | === Can Modulate === |
Revision as of 20:27, 8 April 2011
Game elements used to provide or easy actions in game worlds.
Tools are game elements that enable players' avatars and units to perform actions better that usual, or perform actions otherwise unavailable to them. By being separate entities that can exist independently of avatars or units, Tools can be designed so that they can be picked up, dropped, destroyed, traded, and so on.
Contents
Examples
Roleplaying games Dungeons and Dragons and Hârnmaster make intense use of Tools, often in the form of weapons and armors to affect combat. GURPS includes detail rules for Tools that give bonuses to various skills if the player characters have them.
Weapons are common Tools in many computer games, including Left 4 Dead series, Torchlight, and World of Warcraft. While also doing this, Minecraft and the Team Fortress series, through dispensers and sentry guns respectively, allow players to create Tools that can act independently in combat, needing only to be resupplied. Minecraft and Ultima Online also have various Tools to support crafting and farming. Players of Just Cause 2 and The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker (and some mods and expansions for the Quake series) can find grappling hooks that allow players to move by swinging.
Using the pattern
Besides the design choices available to all Game Items, the fundamental characteristic of Tools are which actions they support. They can support actions by giving Improved Abilities, either through Buffs or through increases in Skills, or by giving New Abilities that may also be Privileged Abilities. A common functional type of Tools are Weapons to affect Damage or how Aim & Shoot is done in Combat. Other Tools affect Crafting, Farming, and Privileged Movement (e.g. grappling hooks in Just Cause 2). Effects more specific that Tools can have is allowing Controllers to be activated and allowing Achilles' Heels to be exploited. Types of Tools defined by being noticeable game elements in their own right in Game Worlds include Installations, Self-Service Kiosks, and Vehicles. Environmental Effects are also noticeable, although not individual objects in Game Worlds that can be Tools when they provide Buffs since players may be able to choose if they wish to be affected by them or not.
Besides what actions are affected, several other design options exist regarding Tools. One is which Units or Avatars can use the Tools, possibly controlled by the presence or absence Powers, Privileged Abilities, or Skills. Another option is which begin with them, and this can be more important for Tools than other Game Items if Enemies can use them as well. A third option relate to adding Tradeoffs or Risk/Reward considerations by linked the use of Tools to the consumption of Resources, the activation of Cooldown periods, or their Deterioration. Finally, game designers need to consider if the usage of several Tools together simultaneously should be allowed, and if so if it should give rise to Combos.
Diegetic Aspects
Tools are a way of providing Improved or New Abilities without breaking Diegetic Consistency. Maintaining Diegetic Consistency can also be used to explain restrictions of where one can acquire Tools, e.g. only through certain Factions. This can also be used to regulate who can used them also without noticing that Actions Have Diegetically Social Consequences.
Consequences
Tools are Game Items that change how Avatars, Characters, or Units (all which may be Enemies) work in games by providing ways to temporarily or permanently provide Improved or New Abilities. Depending on how common the Tools are, they may or not give Privileged Abilities, and when affected by Deterioration they can be Limited Resources. As Tools can give New or Privileged Abilities, they allow the fulfillment of Gain Competence goals.
Since they can change the outcome of actions done by Avatars or Units, they provide a way of constructing Player/Character Skill Composites. The change can also lead to players having an Exaggerated Perception of Influence, and if players can choose between which Tools to use this provides a Freedom of Choice. They may also cause problems with Player Balance in Multiplayer Games since those in possession of Tools may have a distinct advantage.
Relations
Can Instantiate
Actions Have Diegetically Social Consequences, Aim & Shoot, Buffs, Combos, Crafting, Exaggerated Perception of Influence, Farming, Freedom of Choice, Gain Competence, Gain Ownership, Game Items, Improved Abilities, Limited Resources, New Abilities, Player/Character Skill Composites, Privileged Abilities, Privileged Movement
with Resources or Deterioration
with Cooldown
Can Modulate
Achilles' Heels, Aim & Shoot, Avatars, Characters, Combat, Controllers, Damage, Enemies, Skills, Units
Can Be Instantiated By
Environmental Effects, Installations, Self-Service Kiosks, Vehicles, Weapons
Can Be Modulated By
Cooldown, Deterioration, Factions, Powers, Privileged Abilities, Resources, Skills
Possible Closure Effects
-
Potentially Conflicting With
Player Balance in Multiplayer Games
History
An update of the pattern Tools that was part of the original collection in the book Patterns in Game Design[1].
References
- ↑ Björk, S. & Holopainen, J. (2004) Patterns in Game Design. Charles River Media. ISBN1-58450-354-8.
Acknowledgements
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