Chargers
Chargers are locations in the Game World that affect the players' resources when they are in the location.
Some games with game worlds have places that provide benefits to players as long as they are in them. When these benefits consist of recharging resources or adding speed these game world areas are Chargers.
Contents
Examples
Speed boosters in race games of the Super Monkey Ball series give, as their names imply, more speed to the player driving on top of the charger.
The Battlefield series have two categories of chargers: medicine cabinets and ammunition caches that replenish the health and ammunition of the players' avatars, and repair facilities that fix damages to vehicles.
The Board Game RoboRally contains repair areas, which remove damage from the player's robot if it spends time there.
Using the pattern
Creating Chargers require that one decided both what effects they should have and where in Game Worlds they should be placed. The two main options regarding effects for Chargers is to either provide Resources
Examples of Resources that can given by Chargers are Ammunition and Health but in Racing games this can also be temporary boosts in speed.
Selecting the Resources Improved Abilities, and possibly Privileged Abilities, or gained defines the use of the Charger. The way it produces Resources is similar to Resource Generators except that players usually do not have any choice if they should be affected by the Charger (besides not entering its affect area), and any Privileged Ability granted by the Charger may be activated at once, for example, as in the case of speed boosters in most racing games. Improved Abilities can be handled by simply increasing Skills or increasing the effect of player actions.
Interface Aspects
Given their importance to gameplay, it may be relevant to make Chargers have Diegetically Outstanding Features so that players are unlikely to miss noticing them.
Consequences
Chargers provide means for players to get Improved Abilities as well as being sources for Renewable Resources. In the latter case, they function as both Resource Locations and Resource Generators but do typically not produce any Resources unless players are in the immediate vicinity. They are Environmental Effects in Game Worlds that provide Location-Fixed Abilities and usually define natural Collecting and Traverse goals to Gain Competence, and may add additional challenges to Maneuvering. All these characteristics of Chargers help make the areas that contain them into Strategic Locations.
If Chargers provides bonuses beyond the normal limits of the game, i.e., letting players move faster than otherwise possible, the Improved Abilities they provide can also be seen as Privileged Abilities. For Chargers that give a certain effect per time unit spent in its effect area (typically a replenishing of a Resource), staying on them require Tradeoffs for players between this and other actions, and may also require a Risk/Reward judgments if hostile actions are possible against them.
Relations
Can Instantiate
Collecting, Environmental Effects, Gain Competence, Improved Abilities, Location-Fixed Abilities, Privileged Abilities, Strategic Locations, Resource Generators, Resource Locations, Renewable Resources, Risk/Reward, Tradeoffs, Traverse
Can Modulate
Can Be Instantiated By
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Can Be Modulated By
Diegetically Outstanding Features
Possible Closure Effects
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Potentially Conflicting With
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History
An updated version of the pattern Chargers 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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