Difference between revisions of "Time Limits"
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The survival mode in the [[Left 4 Dead Series]] sets the goal for players to still be alive after 4 minutes to meet the easiest goal condition. | The survival mode in the [[Left 4 Dead Series]] sets the goal for players to still be alive after 4 minutes to meet the easiest goal condition. | ||
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+ | [[Ricochet Robots]] gives the other gamers a limited amount of time to find better solutions to the game's movement puzzles after one has been given by one of the gamers. This provides a chain of [[Time Limits]] in the game until all gamers fail to find a better solution. | ||
== Using the pattern == | == Using the pattern == |
Revision as of 16:37, 4 December 2009
The Time Limit for completing an action, reaching a goal, staying in a certain mode of play, or finishing a game session has a limit based on either game time or real time.
Many games put limits on how long players can plan or perform certain actions while other put limits on how long the game as a whole can take. By doing so they can guarantee that the game progresses according to some planned design or that the gaming activity will be concluded before a certain time. The latter can can also be used to create end conditions in game where there otherwise would be none. The measurement of time can be either in game time or real time, or both although limits in game time only influences rather than controls the length of play and game sesions.
Typically Time Limits indicate that something needs to be achieved before the given amount of time has passed but only can equally well have gameplay built upon avoiding certain events occurring until after a given Time Limit has passed.
Contents
Examples
In the racing games Sega Rally and Outrun gamers have a certain number of seconds to reach the next check point or lose the game. Reaching it in time adds time to reach a new check point, encouraging gamers not only to reach the point within the given time but do it as fast as possible.
Soccer matches have a time limit of 90 minutes (plus some extra time depending on the judgment of the referees) divided into two periods of 45 minutes. This limits how much physical effort the teams must be able to produce and makes it easier to plan tournaments and media coverages.
Chess tournaments typically have rules regarding Time Limits, both for making a move and for the whole time available for a player.
The survival mode in the Left 4 Dead Series sets the goal for players to still be alive after 4 minutes to meet the easiest goal condition.
Ricochet Robots gives the other gamers a limited amount of time to find better solutions to the game's movement puzzles after one has been given by one of the gamers. This provides a chain of Time Limits in the game until all gamers fail to find a better solution.
Using the pattern
Cooldown
The first point of view can be the effect of The Show Must Go On as players may experience Penalties if they remain passive. An example of the third point of view is to make Resources expire after a certain Time Limit, something that often occurs naturally with Shared Resources through other players' exploitation of the Resources. All these three kinds of Time Limits are somewhat cumbersome to use in Self-Facilitated Games unless the measuring of the time is designed as an integral part of the gameplay. Game Pauses with Real-Time Games can disrupt the effect of Time Limits for reaching goals and performing actions. For example, if the player is allowed to pause the game in Tetris the natural Time Limit on planning is destroyed.
Modulating Tension for reaching goals with Time Limits requires that the players are given clear indications of the goals with Goal Indicators and also that there is Status Indicator of the time left or at least a Progress Indicator of how much the players have achieved so far. Progress Indicators are also good to use when the Time Limits are used in Delayed Effects. A slightly special case of this kind of modulation is to have a Time Limit on the life time of Ephemeral Goals where the goal is available for the players only for a certain amount of time during the game. This is sometimes used in setting up specific missions in MMORPGs.
Power-Ups and Penalties for the players often use Time Limits to balance the gameplay and provide more Varied Gameplay. The Time Limit can be used with Privileged Actions, New Abilities, Improved Abilities, Decreased Abilities, Ability Losses, and Game Pauses as well as other patterns. The Time Limit does not only have to concern how long a Power-Up persists or how long an action lasts but can also be how long it takes before a new Power-Ups appears or the action can be performed again, in both cases determining, in a sense, the interval for Renewable Resources to appear.
Games in which modes of play or game instances do not have natural end conditions often use Time Limits as end conditions, for example, in Soccer or in some Quick Games. Games with Continuous Goals, such as Preventing Goals, sometimes use Time Limits also in similar fashion to determine winning conditions. For example, in King of the Hill variants the winner is the first player to remain the king for a certain period of time, say three minutes, which also acts as an end condition for the game instance.
Diegetic Aspects
Text about how the pattern relates to diegetic elements of the presentation of the game; primarily useful in mechanical patterns
Interface Aspects
Text about how the pattern relates to interface elements of the game; primarily useful in dynamic patterns
Narrative Aspects
Text about how the pattern relates to diegetic elements; primarily useful in dynamic and maybe aesthetical patterns
Consequences
Time Limits make time a Resource, more specifically a Limited Resource, for players. They automatically give players Limited Planning Ability (regardless if any planning is required), which can give game design the Right Level of Difficulty, and make the players have to accept Tradeoffs between which actions they want to perform, including evaluating the Tradeoffs themselves. Time Limits may also be used to control the contraction of Shrinking Game Worlds, create Tick-Based Games, or limit how often Resources can be invested when situations where Arithmetic Rewards for Investments exist. For games that requires Player Physical Prowess the use of Time Limits puts a limit to the needed effort, or at least the needed endurance of the players.
More specifically, Time Limits can be used for at least three different reasons: first, to create Time Pressure and Tension for the players related to achieving a goal or performing some actions in the game; second, to limit the effect of consequences of player actions and game events, such as effects of some types of Penalties, Rewards, and Power-Ups; and third, to create Time Limited Game Instances, limit the lifespan of specific modes of play or to make Tied Results possible.
When the players have some Game State Indicator of how much is left of the Time Limit naturally creates Anticipation and sometimes Hovering Closures. Often Time Limits are used to have more pressure on the players leave areas in the Game World, such as Deadly Traps and Safe Havens, or to perform other types of actions, e.g. Trading and Puzzle Solving. Time Limits used for Turn Taking, and Game Pauses in general, limit the possible Downtime. Time Limits on game instances can also alleviate some of the downsides of Early Elimination as the eliminated players have a clear indication how long that game instance is going to last.
Relations
Can Instantiate
Resources, Tradeoffs, Limited Planning Ability, Right Level of Difficulty, Limited Resources, Tick-Based Games
Can Modulate
Early Elimination, Continuous Goals, Evade, Race, King of the Hill, Ephemeral Goals, Preventing Goals, New Abilities, Improved Abilities, Decreased Abilities, Ability Losses, Game Pauses, Turn Taking, Puzzle Solving, Empowerment, Tension, Anticipation, Hovering Closures, Resources, Arithmetic Rewards for Investments, Quick Games, Analysis Paralysis, Trading, Renewable Resources
Can Be Instantiated By
Deadly Traps, Shared Resources, Power-Ups, Delayed Effects, The Show Must Go On
Can Be Modulated By
Goal Indicators, Progress Indicators, Game State Indicators, Tied Results
Potentially Conflicting With
Safe Havens, Downtime, Self-Facilitated Games, Game Pauses
History
This pattern was part of the original collection in the book 'Patterns in Game Design' (Björk & Holopainen, 2004).
References
Björk, S. & Holopainen, J. (2004) Patterns in Game Design. Charles River Media. ISBN1-58450-354-8.