Difference between revisions of "Scenes"

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[[Category:To be Published]]
 
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[[Category:Staffan's current workpage]]
 
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''The one-sentence "definition" that should be in italics.''
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''An in time and space localized gameplay period.''
  
This pattern is a still a stub.
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Some games divide gameplay into several different sequences differentiate by where and when they take place in the game world. Such individual sequences are [[Scenes]].
  
 
=== Examples ===
 
=== Examples ===
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==== Anti-Examples ====
 
==== Anti-Examples ====
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[[Dwarf Fortress]] and [[Minecraft]] are examples of games with [[Open Worlds]] and no [[Cutscenes]].
  
 
== Using the pattern ==
 
== Using the pattern ==
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A first option when considering the use of [[Scenes]] is it they should be [[Levels]]. This subpattern of [[Scenes]] basically puts hard boundaries on [[Movement]]
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[[Narration Structures]]
 
[[Narration Structures]]
 
[[Game Worlds]]
 
[[Game Worlds]]
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[[Open Destiny]]
 
[[Open Destiny]]
 
[[Creative Control]]
 
[[Creative Control]]
[[Levels]]
 
  
 
=== Diegetic Aspects ===
 
=== Diegetic Aspects ===
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[[Environmental Storytelling]]
 
[[Environmental Storytelling]]
 
[[Predetermined Story Structures]]
 
[[Predetermined Story Structures]]
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[[Movement]]
  
 
=== Can Instantiate ===
 
=== Can Instantiate ===

Revision as of 13:11, 30 June 2014

An in time and space localized gameplay period.

Some games divide gameplay into several different sequences differentiate by where and when they take place in the game world. Such individual sequences are Scenes.

Examples

Scenes are a game concept is primarily used in Tabletop Roleplaying Games, and is explicitly discussed in Toon and Vampire: The Masquerade. The latter defines Scenes as “one compact period of time in one location”[1]. Fiasco and Universalis are examples of more modern Roleplaying Games which explores alternative power structures by letting players, rather than game masters, create Scenes

Since Levels create rigidly-confined Scenes, many Computer Games exhibits the pattern also. Adventure Games are among those that most often make use of Levels for narrative purposes, with Grim Fandango and the Walking Dead seriesas examples of how Scenes unlock the narration as gameplay challenges are overcome. Fahrenheit shows a more complex use of Scenes in that it shifts which character the player controls between each of them.

The Assassin's Creed series is an example of how Action Games can make use of Scenes to construct more complex narratives. Here, the main historical gameplay is framed by Scenes of focused on the modern day character Desmond Miles. Another example of use of Scenes in the series is from the second game, where players briefly get to play Altaïr from the first game as to get knowledge about how Altaïr's bloodline continued.

Anti-Examples

Dwarf Fortress and Minecraft are examples of games with Open Worlds and no Cutscenes.

Using the pattern

A first option when considering the use of Scenes is it they should be Levels. This subpattern of Scenes basically puts hard boundaries on Movement


Narration Structures Game Worlds Characters Temporal Consistency Melodramatic Structures Open Destiny Creative Control

Diegetic Aspects

Interface Aspects

Narrative Aspects

Consequences

--- Predetermined Story Structures and can thereby be used to progress a narrative as gameplay progresses, especially since any present Boss Monsters or Environmental Storytelling ---

Relations

Cutscenes Environmental Storytelling Predetermined Story Structures Movement

Can Instantiate

Game Worlds, Melodramatic Structures, Narration Structures

with ...

Can Modulate

Characters

Can Be Instantiated By

Levels

Can Be Modulated By

Creative Control

Possible Closure Effects

-

Potentially Conflicting With

Open Destiny, Temporal Consistency

History

New pattern created in this wiki.

References

  1. Mark Rein·Hagen (1991). Vampire - The Masquerade, page 31. White Wolf.

Acknowledgements

-