Difference between revisions of "Stimulated Planning"
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[[Development Trees]], [[Direct Information]], [[Downtime]], [[Extended Actions]], [[Freedom of Choice]], [[Game Pauses]], [[Game State Overviews]], [[Internal Conflicts]], | [[Development Trees]], [[Direct Information]], [[Downtime]], [[Extended Actions]], [[Freedom of Choice]], [[Game Pauses]], [[Game State Overviews]], [[Internal Conflicts]], | ||
[[Investments]], | [[Investments]], | ||
− | [[Illusion of Influence]], [[Narration Structures]], [[Outstanding Features]], [[Game Pauses]], [[Perfect Information]], [[Player-Planned Character Development]], [[Predictable Consequences]], [[Private Game Spaces]], [[Puzzle Solving]], [[Resource Management]], [[Replayability]], [[Risk/Reward]], [[Safe Havens]], [[Save-Load Cycles]], [[Scores]], | + | [[Illusion of Influence]], [[Narration Structures]], [[Outstanding Features]], [[Game Pauses]], [[Perfect Information]], [[Player-Planned Character Development]], [[Predictable Consequences]], [[Private Game Spaces]], [[Puzzle Solving]], [[Resource Management]], [[Replayability]], [[Risk/Reward]], [[Safe Havens]], [[Save-Load Cycles]], [[Scores]], |
+ | [[Strategic Knowledge]], [[Tradeoffs]], [[Turn-Based Games]], [[Turn Taking]], [[Ultra-Powerful Events]], [[Units]] | ||
[[Drawing Stacks]] together with [[Memorizing]] | [[Drawing Stacks]] together with [[Memorizing]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Line of Sight]] together with [[Stealth]] | ||
=== Can Be Modulated By === | === Can Be Modulated By === |
Revision as of 17:46, 28 March 2011
Gameplay structures that encourage players to plan future actions in the game.
Some games provide players with the opportunity to predict with some certainty the outcomes of actions and thereby be able to plan what to do thereafter. The certainty of the outcomes and the number of possible future game states after a couple of actions decide if these games can be said to encourage Stimulated Planning amongst players. Depending on what type of challenges a game presents, the planning may include anticipating other players actions and planning.
Examples
All puzzles are examples of games that Stimulate Planning, and puzzle-like games like Ricochet Robots, Continuity, and Cursor*10 have the same characteristic.
Classical strategy games such as Go and Chess provide players that show the whole game state perfect information and have no unpredictability to the effects of actions provide ample support for Stimulated Planning. Diplomacy adds negotiation to the gameplay, and by doing so add making plans how to negotiate in the future part of the gameplay activity. Stratego is an example of a strategy game also supporting planning but with part of the game state hidden, while Poker, RoboRally, and No Thanks use both randomness and hidden information but in this case encourages players to consider the other players' incomplete views of the gameplay as part of the planning.
Stimulated Planning can also be encouraged before gameplay begins. An important aspect of collectible card games, e.g. Magic: The Gathering and the Pokémon Trading Card Game, is to create play decks from a large collection of cards before an actual game begins. Other games consist only of planning activities before the gameplay begins, for example Crobots or P-Robots where programming robots are the players' challenges and 4 Minutes and 33 Seconds of Uniqueness where figuring out when to play is the main challenge. Looking at more ordinary games, role-playing games support players both before and during gameplay in planning how their characters can develop and this can be found in both tabletop systems (e.g. Dungeons & Dragons or GURPS) and computer-based systems (e.g. The Elder Scrolls series and Fallout series). Real-time strategy games such as Command and Conquer and StarCraft that provide different types of units and special abilities encourage players to plan how they are going to play before actually starting to play the games.
Making raids in World of Warcraft are examples of activities within games that can require extensive planning by whole groups of players, and the main gameplay activity of Space Alert is this type of group planning.
Using the pattern
Encouraging player to try to figure out how ones actions can cause the game to enter a wanted game state is the essence of Stimulated Planning. Stimulated Planning requires that players can have goals that are not immediately possible to try and reach, and that they can know or predict how immediate actions can be combined to get closer to reaching the goal with a level of certainty making the planning seem meaningful. A basic dichotomy can be made between Tactical Planning, planning based on the current game state, and Strategic Planning, planning based upon general assumption of the game system, but many design options can be used for both purposes.
Narration Structures is a common tool to provide players with a long-term goal not immediately accessible, but Outstanding Features in Game Worlds that are either far away or difficult to reach may fill the same purpose. Giving players Creative Control (e.g. to do Action Programming or create Algorithmic Agents) encourages players to set up their own Player Created Goals but may fail if players are uninspired. Freedom of Choice does not necessarily need to be present or extensive, e.g. No Thanks provides only two actions while still having Stimulated Planning) but unless it exists the planning is limited to either performing an action or not (which is another way to explain the gameplay in No Thanks), and the same applies to Illusion of Influence.
The ability to plan how a chain of actions can lead to a wanted game state depend on both how many actions is required and how difficult it is to make a correct assumption of the effects of those actions. However, to do planning at all some time to do the planning is first required, and providing this time can be enforced by the use of Downtime (e.g. through Turn Taking or Ultra-Powerful Events). Stimulated Planning can also be encouraged on a voluntary basis, e.g. through making Single-Player Games use Turns or allow Game Pauses. Real-Time Games by their nature act against stimulating planning, but may be supported through making No-Ops safe through Game Pauses or the presence of Safe Havens.
Activities that require planning include Resource Management, Puzzle Solving (e.g. to achieve Capture), or avoiding being in the Line of Sight of Agents or Traps in order to complete Stealth goals. Especially Resource Management can provide a great variety of possible actions that can Stimulate Planning of how to make use of Limited Resources: which Resources and Units should be created by Producers or Converters, what Investments to make, and which Resources should be saved in Containers. Further, many sorts of actions promote planning: Extended Actions may require it as well as provide time to plans what to do next, actions with Delayed Effects such as Development Time may require planning to make full use of Timing, having to choose between possible Rewards, and the long-term consequences of Irreversible Actions may require more planning than other actions. Limits on which actions can be done make them into Resources and thereby also stimulate planning; examples of ways to do this is Action Caps such as Budgeted Action Points but making actions have Cooldown periods is also possible. Any Risk/Reward choices or choices that require Tradeoffs also promote Stimulated Planning. The number of actions available is one aspect of this so Complex Gameplay effects Stimulated Planning, typically by making it both more difficulty and more necessary, while Limited Set of Actions makes it easier without necessarily making it needed. Collaboration or just coordinating activities into Collaborative Actions also requires planning, especially with Asymmetric Abilities. By having Mutual Goals this may become a necessity, as for example in Space Alert.
While Predictable Consequences is required on at least some level for the pattern to be present (since otherwise it is impossible to plan what to do after the first action), various types of Internal Conflicts can make it a necessity. The presence of Enemies make the planning of actions more complex because one must consider their actions as well (especially if these are groups with Orthogonal Unit Differentiation). If the Enemy actions are easily predictable, e.g. the movement of aliens in Space Invaders, this may require more planning in the form of Puzzle Solving or Dexterity-Based Actions for some parts of the plan. With more complex behaviors, either by opposing players or sufficiently complex Algorithmic Agents, the Enemies become Agents which may cause the planning to become more difficult (one must consider what the Agents are planning) and may even shift the gameplay towards Negotiation or Social Interaction. This can partly be countered by Public Information or Symmetric Information about other players' goals and game elements to make it easier to predict them, with the added feature that players know what other players know. Private Game Spaces also encourages Stimulated Planning since that when other players only indirectly, if at all, can effect the player's efforts one's own efforts have more Predictable Consequences.
That players must have a certain presence of Predictable Consequences of their actions does not mean that complete predictability is desirable from players' perspectives; one may want to plan so that one is intentional unaware of the exact outcomes to allow oneself to have Surprises. This can be a motivating factor for Game Masters, either because they themselves will be provided with challenges during gameplay or that the results narration is unknown to them.
A basic requirement for being able to draw conclusions about what effects ones actions will have is knowing something about the current game state. Direct Information of course provide this, even more so for and games with Perfect Information (e.g. Chess or Go), but games with Imperfect Information may use Game State Overviews to provide sufficient information to support the planning. Games that piecewise hand out resources or information about resources, e.g. through Drawing Stacks, allow players to engage in Stimulated Planning through Memorizing what has been used and from that information consider possible plans.
Since games that provide players with too much support for planning may cause Analysis Paralysis, and too much Downtime for other players in Multiplayer Games, Stimulated Planning may need to be balanced with Limited Planning Abilities (but see Ricochet Robots for an exception) or, for Multiplayer Games, making the Stimulated Planning part of the required Negotiation in Teams. This can be through hiding parts of the game state, e.g. through Fog of War or Uncertainty of Information, or through providing Limited Foresight to counter Predictable Consequences, e.g. by making the outcome of actions depend on Randomness.
Planning may occur by itself between play sessions, and for this reason Stimulated Planning can be said to be encouraged by Asynchronous Games. Player-Planned Character Development in roleplaying games and Developlment Trees are example of game features that further increase the likelihood of the Extra-Game Actions of planning between play sessions. Stimulated Planning can be promoted by the Extra-Game Actions of Save-Load Cycles, which allows players to do [Experimenting]] first and then try to overcome challenges.
Focusing solely on Strategic Planning, games can also have Stimulated Planning between game sessions by containing Deck Building or making Strategic Knowledge important. When a game has Replayability it is often has Stimulated Planning, if only to plan how to have a different experience if nothing else. Cursor*10 can be be seen in the light as a Meta Game where a player must plan in one game session what effect his or her actions have in the following game sessions (although it should be noted that the session are played back-to-back).
Diegetic Aspects
As mentioned above, Outstanding Features of Game Worlds typically play important roles in games to provide goals.
Interface Aspects
Game State Overviews and Scores can both support the establishment of short and long term goals, and depending on how much Diegetic Consistency can be ignored, Geospatial Game Widgets can provide similar functionality. Book-Keeping Tokens and open Discard Piles are ways to have game elements provide information to support planning, while Near Miss Indicators can help players readjust their planning, either by noticing their own failures or by becoming aware of other players' actions.
Narrative Aspects
Similar to Outstanding Features, Cutscenes and Narration Structures typically play important roles in games to provide long-term goals but can do this beyond what the player has perceived of the Game World so far.
Consequences
Stimulated Planning gives Player Created Goals and Hierarchy of Goals since players are required to set up smaller goals that together lead to the intended games state. When players perceive they benefit from extensive planning and engage in it, this provides Cognitive Engrossment and may turn gameplay into Puzzle Solving if enough information is available and there are Predicable Consequences. When information is insufficient but can be gained, Stimulated Planning instead causes Player Created Goals to Gain Information, possibly through Experimenting. It also can give players a sense of Empowerment in that they can envision how they can effect the gameplay, and being able to efficient plan can be a measure of Game Mastery.
When it may not be possible to see a solution Stimulated Planning may give rise to Analysis Paralysis. This may not need to be a problem in Single-Player Games since the player is occupied, but for Multiplayer Games this leads to Downtime for other players and even very short period of planning may give rise to this.
In Real-Time Games, Stimulated Planning makes Disruption of Focused Attention more likely since players may need to perform Attention Swapping to address more immediate concerns, and may create Tension if one perceived that one does not have enough time to do the planning. In Multiplayer Games with Teams, Stimulated Planning leads to Negotiation and Social Interaction.
For games that encourage planning between game sessions, e.g. through Deck Building or making Strategic Knowledge valuable, the may lead planning in the form of Extra-Game Actions.
Relations
Can Instantiate
Analysis Paralysis, Attention Swapping, Cognitive Engrossment, Disruption of Focused Attention, Downtime, Gain Information, Hierarchy of Goals, Experimenting, Extra-Game Actions, Empowerment, Game Mastery, Negotiation, Player Created Goals, Puzzle Solving, Social Interaction, Strategic Planning, Tactical Planning, Timing
with Real-Time Games
Can Modulate
Can Be Instantiated By
Action Caps, Action Programming, Agents, Algorithmic Agents, Asynchronous Games, Budgeted Action Points, Capture, Collaboration, Collaborative Actions, Cooldown, Creative Control, Cutscenes, Deck Building, Delayed Effects, Development Time, Development Trees, Direct Information, Downtime, Extended Actions, Freedom of Choice, Game Pauses, Game State Overviews, Internal Conflicts, Investments, Illusion of Influence, Narration Structures, Outstanding Features, Game Pauses, Perfect Information, Player-Planned Character Development, Predictable Consequences, Private Game Spaces, Puzzle Solving, Resource Management, Replayability, Risk/Reward, Safe Havens, Save-Load Cycles, Scores, Strategic Knowledge, Tradeoffs, Turn-Based Games, Turn Taking, Ultra-Powerful Events, Units
Drawing Stacks together with Memorizing
Line of Sight together with Stealth
Can Be Modulated By
Attention Swapping, Book-Keeping Tokens, Complex Gameplay, Discard Piles, Enemies, Fog of War, Geospatial Game Widgets,
Irreversible Actions, Limited Foresight, Limited Set of Actions, Near Miss Indicators, Public Information, Randomness, Symmetric Information, Teams, Uncertainty of Information
Possible Closure Effects
-
Potentially Conflicting With
Limited Planning Abilities, Real-Time Games
History
A rewrite version of the pattern Stimulated Planning 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.