Difference between revisions of "Team Combos"

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(Can Be Instantiated By)
(Using the pattern)
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Players can be encouraged a bit extra in striving for [[Team Combos]] by assigning specific [[Goal Achievements]] to them.
 
Players can be encouraged a bit extra in striving for [[Team Combos]] by assigning specific [[Goal Achievements]] to them.
  
An ersatz for [[Team Combos]] can be achieved in [[Single-Player Games]] through making it possible to make [[Combos]] using [[Units]] - this since the individual [[Units]] can be seen as being a [[Teams|Team]] cooperating.
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An ersatz for [[Team Combos]] can be achieved in [[Single-Player Games]] through making it possible to make [[Combos]] using [[Units]] - this since the individual [[Units]] can be seen as being a [[Teams|Team]] cooperating. Another solution for [[Single-Player Games]] is to provide [[Non-Player Characters]] with [[Supporting Goals]] that can result in them coordinating themselves with the player to achieve what in effect is a [[Team Combos|Team Combo]]. (Of course, this solutions can be used in [[Multiplayer Games]] also but one may in that case first consider [[Team Combos]] between players).
Another solution for [[Single-Player Games]] is to provide [[Non-Player Characters]] with [[Supporting Goals]] that can result in them coordinating themselves with the player to achieve what in effect is a [[Team Combos|Team Combo]].
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=== Interface Aspects ===
 
=== Interface Aspects ===

Revision as of 21:48, 16 March 2011

Sets of actions performed by several different players that trigger additional effects than those that occur due to the individual actions.

By synchronizing their activities in games players can often manage to affect game states in ways they would not be able to do individually. These activities are called Team Combos since they either were coordinated by actual teams or can be perceived by others as if they were working as a team.

Examples

Playing survivors in the Left 4 Dead series typically require some coordination that can be perceived as Team Combos, e.g. one player covering another which is healing a third or one player making a Tank infected follow him or her while the others attack it. However, playing infected against teams of humans requires more coordination to make full use of the special abilities available, e.g. the damaging spit that spitters can place is easily avoided by a survivor unless he is held in place by an attack from a charger or hunter.

The various classes in Team Fortress 2 are built to support each other, e.g. medics can make another player invulnerable with an ÜberCharge after some preparation and the duo can then perform tasks otherwise impossible. Besides the gameplay advantages this provides, the game promotes people to try and make these Team Combos by providing achievements. Examples of such achievement range from one that require rather little coordination, e.g. Blast Assist awarded if ÜberCharging a Soldier that kills 5 enemies), to those requiring mass coordination, e.g. Group Health (deploying ÜberCharges simultaneously with two other Medics).

Using the pattern

Designing Team Combos have similarities to designing Combos but for temporary or permanent Teams in Multiplayer Games. A difference between the Team Combos and ordinary Combos is that they are more likely to depend upon Timing, simply because the different players involved must coordinate when to act or that the Combo simply is the effect of simultaneously performing actions. Another way of making Team Combos different from ordinary Combos is making them impossible for one player to perform due to different players having Characters with different Privileged Abilities through the use of Orthogonal Unit Differentiation and having the Combos depend on their joint actions.

Players can be encouraged a bit extra in striving for Team Combos by assigning specific Goal Achievements to them.

An ersatz for Team Combos can be achieved in Single-Player Games through making it possible to make Combos using Units - this since the individual Units can be seen as being a Team cooperating. Another solution for Single-Player Games is to provide Non-Player Characters with Supporting Goals that can result in them coordinating themselves with the player to achieve what in effect is a Team Combo. (Of course, this solutions can be used in Multiplayer Games also but one may in that case first consider Team Combos between players).

Interface Aspects

Team Combos requires players to be able to engage in Coordination, and the necessary information players need to have for this can be achieved through the use of support such as Communication Channels and Mini-maps. Of course, in games with Unmediated Social Interaction this is easy to achieve.

Consequences

Rather obviously, Team Combos are a way of having Combos in games. They are also Collaborative Actions but ones that acted out with immediate effect as part of Cooperation rather than ones negotiated or ones that take a long time to have their final effect, and which may not be conducted voluntarily.

When Team Combos are neither presented explicitly to players nor obvious, realizing them can be part of Team Strategy Identification. The same goes for cases where players have a multitude of possible combinations of working together.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Collaborative Actions, Combos, Cooperation, Goal Achievements, Team Strategy Identification

Can Modulate

Multiplayer Games, Teams

Can Be Instantiated By

Combos together with Units

Teams together with Coordination, or together with Characters and Orthogonal Unit Differentiation

Non-Player Characters together with Supporting Goals

Can Be Modulated By

Mini-maps, Communication Channels, Timing, Unmediated Social Interaction

Possible Closure Effects

Potentially Conflicting With

History

New pattern from the paper Exploring Aesthetic Gameplay Design Patterns – Camaraderie in Four Games[1].

References

  1. Bergström, K., Björk, S. & Lundgren, S. (2010). Exploring Aesthetic Gameplay Design Patterns – Camaraderie in Four Games. Paper presentation at Mindtrek 2010. Tampere, Finland.

Acknowledgments

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