Difference between revisions of "Shrinking Game Worlds"
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=== Can Instantiate === | === Can Instantiate === | ||
[[Environmental Effects]], | [[Environmental Effects]], | ||
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== History == | == History == |
Revision as of 07:32, 2 September 2011
The one-sentence "definition" that should be in italics.
This pattern is a still a stub.
The game world shrinks and thus restricts players' movement in the game. Some games, primarily those where player compete against each other, decrease the size of the game world as game play progresses. This imposes an outside influence that forces the players together and thereby into conflict.
Contents
Examples
Example: The game area shrinks in Bomber Man after players have failed to eliminate each other in a certain period of time to increase the tension of the game.
Example: One of the multiplayer levels in Half-Life allowed players to activate an air strike. All those not in a bunker complex when the air strike hit was killed, in effect reducing the Game World to the bunker for parts of the game play.
Using the pattern
Shrinking Game Worlds have two prime characteristics: in what way the Game World shrinks and what activates the shrinkage. Having a uniform and predefined way in which the world shrinks, typically by using Tiles as a unit of the shrinkage, and how this is activated, most commonly simple a Time Limit, allows player to have Strategic Knowledge and make increases Conflict if potential for it existed to begin with. If players can control the shrinkage this allows Player Defined Goals anda form of Player Constructed World. The ability to control Shrinking Game Worlds can be used as an offensive ability as being caught in a shrinking area is often a Deadly Trap.
Diegetic Aspects
Interface Aspects
Narrative Aspects
Consequences
Shrinking Game Worlds are Ultra-Powerful Events that instantiate The Show Must Go On. They increase Tension by limiting players' Freedom of Choice by creating Movement Limitations. If the events are caused by Irreversible Actions a Shrinking Game World can ensure Higher-Level Closures as Gameplay Progresses.
Relations
Can Instantiate
Environmental Effects, Movement Limitations, Time Limited Game Instances, Traps
Can Modulate
Can Be Instantiated By
Destructible Objects together with Tiles
Can Be Modulated By
Possible Closure Effects
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Potentially Conflicting With
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History
An updated version of the pattern Shrinking Game World 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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