Difference between revisions of "Privileged Abilities"
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Online multiplayer [[:Category:FPS Games|First-Person Shooters]] such as [[Return to Castle Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory]] or the [[Battlefield series]] use the same method of dividing special abilities, such as repairing vehicles or providing air strikes, to specific classes. Return to [[Castle Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory]] further provides new actions as players gain experience in various activities. The [[Left 4 Dead series]] give the various "special infected" various [[Privileged Abilities]], e.g. acids spits and the ability to steer ridden enemies, and the players with these abilities need to used them together to increase their chances of winning. | Online multiplayer [[:Category:FPS Games|First-Person Shooters]] such as [[Return to Castle Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory]] or the [[Battlefield series]] use the same method of dividing special abilities, such as repairing vehicles or providing air strikes, to specific classes. Return to [[Castle Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory]] further provides new actions as players gain experience in various activities. The [[Left 4 Dead series]] give the various "special infected" various [[Privileged Abilities]], e.g. acids spits and the ability to steer ridden enemies, and the players with these abilities need to used them together to increase their chances of winning. | ||
− | The [[:Category:Board Games|Board Game]] [[History of the World]] uses | + | The [[:Category:Board Games|Board Game]] [[History of the World]] uses [[Cards]] with special abilities that can be played only on certain turns in order to follow loosely the historical development of civilizations. In [[Battlestar Galactica: The Board Game]] players get special actions they can perform based upon which character they are playing. The [[:Category:Card Games|Card Game]] [[Race for the Galaxy]] gives players different starting positions by randomizing starting [[Cards]] and this give players [[Privileged Abilities]], at least to begin with. |
== Using the pattern == | == Using the pattern == | ||
[[Privileged Abilities]] are privileged due to some [[Agents]] have [[Abilities]] that others do not. This can be done in two ways: one is that other agents simply do not have the [[Abilities]] and the other is that one has [[Improved Abilities]] whose effects cannot easily be compensated by skillful play. In [[Multiplayer Games]], the other agents may be other players but the pattern can also be all types of games to differentiate between players' [[Abilities]] and that of [[Non-Player Characters]] or [[Enemies]]; this may include the [[NPCs]] having [[Abilities]] that players do not have. [[Privileged Abilities]] may also be used to differentiate between ''ordinary'' [[Enemies]] and [[Boss Monsters]]. Games with [[Game Masters]] provide these with many [[Privileged Abilities]] since these can access and modify game states and [[Game Worlds]] in ways players cannot. Disregarding [[Game Masters]], the design choices regarding [[Privileged Abilities]] can be divided into three main categories of which the two latter overlaps to a certain degree: the actual nature of the actions they provide, how the actions are made available, and which players have access to the actions. | [[Privileged Abilities]] are privileged due to some [[Agents]] have [[Abilities]] that others do not. This can be done in two ways: one is that other agents simply do not have the [[Abilities]] and the other is that one has [[Improved Abilities]] whose effects cannot easily be compensated by skillful play. In [[Multiplayer Games]], the other agents may be other players but the pattern can also be all types of games to differentiate between players' [[Abilities]] and that of [[Non-Player Characters]] or [[Enemies]]; this may include the [[NPCs]] having [[Abilities]] that players do not have. [[Privileged Abilities]] may also be used to differentiate between ''ordinary'' [[Enemies]] and [[Boss Monsters]]. Games with [[Game Masters]] provide these with many [[Privileged Abilities]] since these can access and modify game states and [[Game Worlds]] in ways players cannot. Disregarding [[Game Masters]], the design choices regarding [[Privileged Abilities]] can be divided into three main categories of which the two latter overlaps to a certain degree: the actual nature of the actions they provide, how the actions are made available, and which players have access to the actions. | ||
− | [[Privileged Abilities]] can take many different forms. [[Privileged Movement]] is a common example, which can include being able to ignore certain [[Obstacles]], enter [[Safe Havens]], use ''grappling hooks'', do special types of [[Jumping]] such as ''double jumps'' or ''wall jumps'' (both found in the [[Super Mario series]]), use [[Quick Returns]], drive [[Vehicles]], initiate [[Quick Travel]], being able to use or create [[Warp Zones]] (as Chell can do in the [[Portal series]]), or act as [[Spawn Points]] (as squad leaders in [[Battlefield 2]]). Giving players special actions in [[Combat]], such as [[Combos]], are also common. Others, somewhat more uncommon include [[Construction]], [[Crafting]], and other ways of creating or manipulating [[Resources]] - restoring [[Health]] can be considered an example of this. Being able to switch between different [[Vision Modes]] (as is possible in the [[Alien vs Predator series]] or [[Batman: Arkham Asylum]]) does not directly provide new actions but can hugely change how players perceive [[Game Worlds]] and what they can do within them. Activate or deactivating [[Alarms]] is an even more uncommon [[Privileged Abilities|Privileged Ability]] but when it exists often directly influences the overall gameplay. Games with [[Drawing Stacks]] are [[Discard Piles]] can have [[Privileged Abilities]] in letting players look through them, pick [[Cards]] or [[Tiles]] from any place within them, or take from the [[Discard Piles]] when in ordinary cases one should have taken from the [[Drawing Stacks]]. On a very general level, being allowed to treat actions as [[Interruptible Actions]], being able to reverse [[Irreversible Events]], being given [[Extra Chances]], or the power to create [[Fudged Results]] are all examples of [[Privileged Abilities]]. In some cases, even the option of performing [[No-Op]] actions can be a [[Privileged Abilities|Privileged Ability]]. | + | [[Privileged Abilities]] can take many different forms. [[Privileged Movement]] is a common example, which can include being able to ignore certain [[Obstacles]], enter [[Safe Havens]], use ''grappling hooks'', do special types of [[Jumping]] such as ''double jumps'' or ''wall jumps'' (both found in the [[Super Mario series]]), use [[Quick Returns]], drive [[Vehicles]], initiate [[Quick Travel]], being able to use or create [[Warp Zones]] (as Chell can do in the [[Portal series]]), or act as [[Spawn Points]] (as squad leaders in [[Battlefield 2]]). Giving players special actions in [[Combat]], such as [[Combos]], are also common. Others, somewhat more uncommon include [[Construction]], [[Crafting]], and other ways of creating or manipulating [[Resources]] - restoring [[Health]] can be considered an example of this. Being able to switch between different [[Vision Modes]] (as is possible in the [[Alien vs Predator series]] or [[Batman: Arkham Asylum]]) does not directly provide new actions but can hugely change how players perceive [[Game Worlds]] and what they can do within them. Activate or deactivating [[Alarms]] is an even more uncommon [[Privileged Abilities|Privileged Ability]] but when it exists often directly influences the overall gameplay. [[Trumps]] provide [[Privileged Abilities]] to a suit of [[Cards]] in games with [[Trick Taking]]. Games with [[Drawing Stacks]] are [[Discard Piles]] can have [[Privileged Abilities]] in letting players look through them, pick [[Cards]] or [[Tiles]] from any place within them, or take from the [[Discard Piles]] when in ordinary cases one should have taken from the [[Drawing Stacks]]. On a very general level, being allowed to treat actions as [[Interruptible Actions]], being able to reverse [[Irreversible Events]], being given [[Extra Chances]], or the power to create [[Fudged Results]] are all examples of [[Privileged Abilities]]. In some cases, even the option of performing [[No-Op]] actions can be a [[Privileged Abilities|Privileged Ability]]. |
Some [[Privileged Abilities]], for example being in control of [[Player-Decided Distribution of Rewards & Penalties]], are not direct actions during gameplay but rather let players affect the evaluation functions of a game. [[Privileged Abilities]] can also be passive, in which case they do not give players new actions they can perform but rather let them do actions they already have in situations where other could not do them. The most common of this type of [[Privileged Abilities]] is probably to have lessened effects or complete [[Invulnerabilities]] to [[Penalties]] or [[Environmental Effects]] such as [[Damage]] ([[Team Fortress 2]] shows how [[Invulnerabilities]] can be temporarily given to combatants without unbalancing the game as a whole through allowing medics to activate ''übercharges''). | Some [[Privileged Abilities]], for example being in control of [[Player-Decided Distribution of Rewards & Penalties]], are not direct actions during gameplay but rather let players affect the evaluation functions of a game. [[Privileged Abilities]] can also be passive, in which case they do not give players new actions they can perform but rather let them do actions they already have in situations where other could not do them. The most common of this type of [[Privileged Abilities]] is probably to have lessened effects or complete [[Invulnerabilities]] to [[Penalties]] or [[Environmental Effects]] such as [[Damage]] ([[Team Fortress 2]] shows how [[Invulnerabilities]] can be temporarily given to combatants without unbalancing the game as a whole through allowing medics to activate ''übercharges''). | ||
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[[Tools]], | [[Tools]], | ||
[[Transferable Items]], | [[Transferable Items]], | ||
+ | [[Trumps]], | ||
[[Vehicles]], | [[Vehicles]], | ||
[[Vision Modes]], | [[Vision Modes]], |
Revision as of 07:59, 24 August 2011
Abilities that let agents perform actions not readily available to others.
Many games have different sets of actions possible for different players. The actions one player has, or possibly a few players have, are Privileged Abilities in that they allow different tactics during gameplay, and allow different forms of goals to be sought.
Contents
Examples
Class-based Tabletop Roleplaying Games such as Dungeons & Dragons and Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay limit abilities so that they are privileged to specific classes. Computer roleplaying games, such as the NetHack, Torchlight, the Dragon Age series, the Neverwinter Nights series, and the Diablo series, continued to make use of Privileged Abilities by making certain actions only available to specific classes, for example, only allowing wizards to cast spells. This has also been carried over to some Massively Multiplayer Online Games, e.g. World of Warcraft.
Many First-Person Shooters, e.g. the Doom and Quake series give players a sort of Privileged Abilities in the various weapons they have access to. Half-Life 2 does likewise but also includes a gravity gun while the Portal series only lets players use a portal gun that can create inter-spatial portal between different parts of levels. The Legend of Zelda series, and to an even greater extent the Just Cause series, gives players the possibility of doing movement by using grappling hooks that nobody other inhabitants can do. One type of Privileged Abilities revolve around manipulation of game time: the Max Payne series gives players the possibility of slowing time for all enemies through engaging in bullet time while Braid and later installments of the Prince of Persia series lets players rewind time.
Online multiplayer First-Person Shooters such as Return to Castle Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory or the Battlefield series use the same method of dividing special abilities, such as repairing vehicles or providing air strikes, to specific classes. Return to Castle Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory further provides new actions as players gain experience in various activities. The Left 4 Dead series give the various "special infected" various Privileged Abilities, e.g. acids spits and the ability to steer ridden enemies, and the players with these abilities need to used them together to increase their chances of winning.
The Board Game History of the World uses Cards with special abilities that can be played only on certain turns in order to follow loosely the historical development of civilizations. In Battlestar Galactica: The Board Game players get special actions they can perform based upon which character they are playing. The Card Game Race for the Galaxy gives players different starting positions by randomizing starting Cards and this give players Privileged Abilities, at least to begin with.
Using the pattern
Privileged Abilities are privileged due to some Agents have Abilities that others do not. This can be done in two ways: one is that other agents simply do not have the Abilities and the other is that one has Improved Abilities whose effects cannot easily be compensated by skillful play. In Multiplayer Games, the other agents may be other players but the pattern can also be all types of games to differentiate between players' Abilities and that of Non-Player Characters or Enemies; this may include the NPCs having Abilities that players do not have. Privileged Abilities may also be used to differentiate between ordinary Enemies and Boss Monsters. Games with Game Masters provide these with many Privileged Abilities since these can access and modify game states and Game Worlds in ways players cannot. Disregarding Game Masters, the design choices regarding Privileged Abilities can be divided into three main categories of which the two latter overlaps to a certain degree: the actual nature of the actions they provide, how the actions are made available, and which players have access to the actions.
Privileged Abilities can take many different forms. Privileged Movement is a common example, which can include being able to ignore certain Obstacles, enter Safe Havens, use grappling hooks, do special types of Jumping such as double jumps or wall jumps (both found in the Super Mario series), use Quick Returns, drive Vehicles, initiate Quick Travel, being able to use or create Warp Zones (as Chell can do in the Portal series), or act as Spawn Points (as squad leaders in Battlefield 2). Giving players special actions in Combat, such as Combos, are also common. Others, somewhat more uncommon include Construction, Crafting, and other ways of creating or manipulating Resources - restoring Health can be considered an example of this. Being able to switch between different Vision Modes (as is possible in the Alien vs Predator series or Batman: Arkham Asylum) does not directly provide new actions but can hugely change how players perceive Game Worlds and what they can do within them. Activate or deactivating Alarms is an even more uncommon Privileged Ability but when it exists often directly influences the overall gameplay. Trumps provide Privileged Abilities to a suit of Cards in games with Trick Taking. Games with Drawing Stacks are Discard Piles can have Privileged Abilities in letting players look through them, pick Cards or Tiles from any place within them, or take from the Discard Piles when in ordinary cases one should have taken from the Drawing Stacks. On a very general level, being allowed to treat actions as Interruptible Actions, being able to reverse Irreversible Events, being given Extra Chances, or the power to create Fudged Results are all examples of Privileged Abilities. In some cases, even the option of performing No-Op actions can be a Privileged Ability.
Some Privileged Abilities, for example being in control of Player-Decided Distribution of Rewards & Penalties, are not direct actions during gameplay but rather let players affect the evaluation functions of a game. Privileged Abilities can also be passive, in which case they do not give players new actions they can perform but rather let them do actions they already have in situations where other could not do them. The most common of this type of Privileged Abilities is probably to have lessened effects or complete Invulnerabilities to Penalties or Environmental Effects such as Damage (Team Fortress 2 shows how Invulnerabilities can be temporarily given to combatants without unbalancing the game as a whole through allowing medics to activate übercharges).
Certain Privileged Abilities relate to the availability of information: being allowed to look at another players' Hands or having Units with less Fog of War or different Line of Sight rules than other Units for example. Another example of information-related Privileged Abilities are those that provide ways of viewing Game Worlds so that some game elements become Diegetically Outstanding Features (the eagle vision in the Assassin's Creed series is an example of this). These Abilities may be designed to be either active in the sense that getting the information is a gameplay action or passive in that they can always be accessed and mainly affect how players can perform other actions.
Privileged Abilities can either be present at the beginning of gameplay or made available as New or Improved Abilities (e.g. through Unlocking them or Alien Space Bats). Entering Chargers, Controllers, Environmental Effects, or Installations, or taking Power-Ups can give or modify these Abilities while in their vicinity, while having Territories with Location-Fixed Abilities, or simply Area Control of such Abilities can be another form of Privileged Abilities if the Abilities are not provided in many locations. In this case, the activation of Privileged Abilities is tied to specific locations in games and gaining the Privileged Abilities can become a question of knowing Strategic Locations. While Companions may have their own Privileged Abilities, some games (e.g. the Fallout series) gives players extra Rewards for acquiring Companions in the form of Companion-specific Privileged Abilities. Helpers with less agency than Companions do not have their own Privileged Abilities but can provide players with Privileged Abilities through offering services. As the effects of Power-Ups usually are under Time Limits, the effects they have on Player Balance can more easily be controlled than for other types of Privileged Abilities. It is quite common in Strategy Games such as the Civilization series to provide (temporary) Privileged Abilities by Unlocking specific parts of Technology Trees. Becoming Neighbors is a requirement for making the Privileged Abilities often found in Massively Single-Player Online Games which allow players to make Altruistic Actions in other players' Private Game Spaces. Privileged Abilities may also appear due to Penalties inflicted on other players that take away Abilities from them; the effect of losing your knights in Chess while your opponent still has them can be seen as your opponent having the Privileged Abilities of making knights move. A specific form of Privileged Abilities found only in Multiplayer Games is the Abilities to be able to relieve other players' from their state of Helplessness.
The question of who has access to Privileged Abilities can be split into the questions of what Focus Loci provides the action and which players have access to the action. In games with Characters, the Privileged Abilities can be tied to these and losing the Characters results in losing the Privileged Abilities as well. When using Avatars representing Characters as players' Focus Loci, the Privileged Abilities can be represented by Skills to allow further modulation of the Abilities. Making Privileged Abilities depend on the access to Game Items (e.g. Equipment, Tools, and Weapons) can provide thematic explanations to introducing the Abilities during gameplay and can motivate Gain Ownership goals. Transferable Items and Units allow the Privileged Abilities to shift between players by different forms of Transfer of Control, e. g., Stealing or doing certain kinds of Capture actions - Units can however also allow Privileged Abilities to create Competence Areas in Single-Player Games. For games with Role Selection, the actions allowed by a role may or may not be Privileged Abilities depending on if other players are allowed to do the actions as well. However, if any players are allowed to perform the actions additional bonus Privileged Abilities may be given to the choosers of roles as a way of encouraging people to pick roles rather than rely on others to choose them.
The effect of which player has the Privileged Abilities depends heavily upon whether the game involves Teams. If so, Privileged Abilities of players can be matched by the same Abilities in the other teams to create Team Balance. This makes the Teams have Symmetric Abilities while providing Asymmetric Abilities within the Teams and allows individual players to have game-controlled Competence Areas and thereby Functional Roles. In games without Teams but with Cooperation, the pattern can also support Competence Areas (and Functional Roles), while in games with Conflict it is more likely to affect Player Balance.
Possible effects on Player Balance by Privileged Abilities can be mitigated somewhat if they are part of the set of actions selectable by Budgeted Action Points or making them have Cooldown periods.
Consequences
Privileged Abilities give players Empowerment in games since they have Abilities that others do not. This is especially apparent in Self-Facilitated Games that make use of Game Masters, since the entire game state is controlled by them and all events in the game must be approved by them. When they are instead applied on Enemies, they can make these into Boss Monsters and can provide Varied Gameplay in that they can behave differently than ordinary Enemies and require Puzzle Solving since ordinary tactics may not be feasible.
By their very nature, Privileged Abilities create Asymmetric Abilities between players and modulate the value of New Abilities. This may easily affect Player Balance negatively. When unsupervised by the game system, this can create greater and greater imbalances as gameplay progresses, but by actively modifying what Privileged Abilities players have and when, e. g., by deciding the nature of Power-Ups due to the positions of players in a racing game, the pattern can instead be used to create Handicap Systems to support Player Balance. In games with Team Play, this naturally can also affect Team Balance and can strengthen the strive to have Competence Areas as well as give them Game-Induced Player Social Status. Further, it can support stimulated Social Interaction, as players usually need to engage in Coordination to take full advantage of the set of actions they have. If the Privileged Abilities are matched between the teams, Team Balance can be achieved even though Player Balance may not be.
Red Queen Dilemmas can occur if players engaged in Competition can gain access to the same or balancing Privileged Abilities, especially if there are series of Privileged Abilities that have each other as prerequisites (e.g. Technology Trees).
Privileged Abilities that are present from the beginning of the game not only create Asymmetric Starting Conditions but also allow players to perform Strategic Planning. Those Privileged Abilities that are gained during gameplay in contrast increase the need for Tactical Planning since players need to adjust to changes in their own or others capabilities.
In games with Parallel Lives, having some of the game elements that represent the different lives have Privileged Abilities make them have different value to players and thereby affect the overall game balance.
Relations
Can Instantiate
Asymmetric Abilities, Asymmetric Starting Conditions, Competence Areas, Empowerment, Handicap Systems, Interruptible Actions, Player Balance, Safe Havens, Strategic Planning, Tactical Planning
with Boss Monsters
Puzzle Solving, Varied Gameplay
with Competition
with Enemies
with Teams
Coordination, Game-Induced Player Social Status
Can Modulate
Abilities, Abstract Player Constructs, Alarms, Avatars, Characters, Combat, Companions, Damage, Diegetically Outstanding Features, Discard Piles, Drawing Stacks, Enemies, Environmental Effects, Fog of War, Game Items, Hands, Health, Irreversible Events, Jumping, Line of Sight, Multiplayer Games, New Abilities, Non-Player Characters, Obstacles, Parallel Lives, Penalties, Role Selection, Self-Facilitated Games, Teams, Units, Warp Zones
Can Be Instantiated By
Area Control, Chargers, Combos, Companions, Construction, Crafting, Environmental Effects, Equipment, Extra Chances, Fudged Results, Game Masters, Helpers, Improved Abilities, Installations, Invulnerabilities, Location-Fixed Abilities, Neighbors, New Abilities, No-Op, Player-Decided Distribution of Rewards & Penalties, Privileged Movement, Quick Returns, Quick Travel, Skills, Spawn Points, Territories, Tools, Transferable Items, Trumps, Vehicles, Vision Modes, Weapons
Capture together with Transfer of Control
Multiplayer Games together with Controllers, Helplessness, or Tools
Can Be Modulated By
Alien Space Bats, Budgeted Action Points, Cooldown, Technology Trees, Unlocking
Possible Closure Effects
-
Potentially Conflicting With
Team Balance in games with Teams
History
An updated version of the pattern Privileged Abilities 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
Johan Ottosson