Facilitating Rewards

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Rewards that ease gameplay actions or the completion of a game instance.

This pattern is a still a stub.

Examples

Using the pattern

Facilitating Rewards are Rewards that enable players to perform new actions or existing actions better. The main difference between Facilitating Rewards and Access Rewards is that the former gives new Abilities or action to players while the latter provides the possibility for players to choose to get such Abilities or actions.

Typical ways of creating Facilitating Rewards include giving players New or Improved Abilities, providing new Powers, or increasing Skills. Another way of providing Facilitating Rewards and which focuses on progressing spatially in games is to move players to new Levels. In these cases, the use of One-Way Travel can ensure that it is actual (forced) progression towards the end of a game.

Consequences

While being able to perform better in games can provide Freedom of Choice and Player Agency regarding what they can do in those games, it also works against it when players have not been allowed to choose what to become better at.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Freedom of Choice, Player Agency, Rewards

Can Modulate

Levels

Can Be Instantiated By

New Abilities, Improved Abilities, Powers, Skills

Can Be Modulated By

One-Way Travel

Possible Closure Effects

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Potentially Conflicting With

Freedom of Choice Player Agency

History

New pattern created in this wiki. However, it is based upon the concept of "Facilitating Rewards" discussed by Hallford and Hallford[1].

References

  1. Hallford & Hallford, 2001, Swords and Circuitry: A designer’s guide to computer role playing games. Roseville, CA: Prime Publishing, p. 158.

Acknowledgements

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