Role Selection

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Selecting the next action to do by choosing from a limit number of roles.

Some games do provide players with a common pool of possible actions from which each player can only choose one action per turn. This makes players do Role Selection every turn and create competition between players if only one player can choose a specific action.

Examples

The Board Games Puerto Rico and Race for the Galaxy but make use of Role Selection for which actions are performed during a round. All players are allowed to perform the actions but the one who chooses a role gets a benefit (a rebate or a specific action the others do not get) - Race for the Galaxy lets all players choose roles from a personal set of cards so many players can get the same bonuses. Citadels and San Juan uses the same structure as Puerto Rico but in Card Games. All the games put small bonuses on role not selected to increase the likelihood that they are chosen in later rounds.

Using the pattern

The main design requirement for Role Selection is to create a Limited Set of Actions that players can choose from each turn in a Turn-Based Game; see Functional Roles for roles that span more than one turn and Token Placement for game systems where players can choose more than one action per turn. Besides this, several options exist.

One option is whether players pick roles from a common pool (see e.g. Puerto Rico), thereby only allowing one player to choose any specific role, or let every player have their own pool to pick from (see e.g. Race for the Galaxy). While Role Selection may only let the player that chose the role to perform the action, another option is to have the structure from Puerto Rico where all players get to perform the actions the roles indicate but give choosing players get Increased Abilities or Privileged Abilities. For encouraging the use of all role, No-Use Bonus can be applied after the Role Selection is finished for a round so that the roles not chosen are more attractive the next round.

How Role Selection is placed within rounds in one design choice that need to be considered when implementing the pattern. Either all Role Selection is done in Planning Phases which are then followed by Execution Phases, this is the case for Race for the Galaxy, or one role is selected by a player and the actions it provides is done directly afterwards, which is the case for Puerto Rico and San Juan. For the latter, a Turn Taking order is needed. For the former, Turn Taking is optional as long as players have their own pool of roles but here the roles selected can determine the Turn Taking sequence of Execution Phases.

Consequences

Role Selection gives Freedom of Choice for players to choose actions from a Limited Set of Actions in Turn-Based Games. The selection may constitute separate Planning Phases and then form a weak version of Action Programming, or be integrated in the general gameplay. While Role Selection is often done in a Turn Taking order, Role Selection in Planning Phases can determine the Turn Taking order in later Execution Phases.

When only one player can choose a role this is a makes the roles into Functional Roles and may create Competition between players since wanting to have a role become Excluding Goals. Competition and Excluding Goals may still occur even if all players can do the actions if there are additional Privileged Abilities and only one player can choose a role.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Action Programming, Competition, Excluding Goals, Freedom of Choice, Functional Roles, Planning Phases

Can Modulate

Turn Taking, Turn-Based Games

Can Be Instantiated By

Limited Set of Actions

Can Be Modulated By

Increased Abilities, No-Use Bonus, Privileged Abilities, Turn Taking

Possible Closure Effects

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Potentially Conflicting With

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History

New pattern created in this wiki.

References

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Acknowledgements

Karl Bergström