Decreased Abilities
The event of abilities decreasing their efficiency.
This pattern is a still a stub.
Many games have events that make players' future actions have less effect, or less chance of succeeding, than they originally had. These Decreased Abilities can be the consequences of running out of Resources or being affected by hostile actions but require players to use the abilities more efficiently to reach the same level of effect as previously.
Contents
Examples
Each point of damage received in RoboRally gives the player one card less at the beginning of each turn. As these cards are used to program a robot's movement, the reduction in number of cards effectively reduces the player's ability to control the robot.
Being hit by an ice cube or polygon ball weapon in the Monkey Race 2 party game in Super Monkey Ball 2 significantly reduces players' top speed and ability to steer.
Using the pattern
Instantiating Decreased Abilities can easily be done by changing the values in the game state that are part of the evaluation functions of an action. Typically, this is motivated by changes in Skills of Characters or Units. An indirect way of achieving Decreased Abilities is to require use of Limited Resources, and maybe Non-Renewable Resources, so that players have to make Risk/Reward choices of whether to use the action. This limits the Freedom of Choice when the players can use the actions. Reducing the amount of Resources a player can access or store is another way to combine Decreased Abilities with Limited Resources.
Decreased Abilities are often used as Penalties to affect Player Balance. When the effect of this needs to be modulated, Time Limits of the decrease or complementing Improved Abilities in other areas can be used to achieve a Balancing Effect.
A common place for Decreased Abilities to occur in gameplay is as the consequences of Player Killing, either represented through the loss of Tools or experience.
Diegetic Aspects
Interface Aspects
Narrative Aspects
Consequences
Decreased Abilities are Penalties that affect players' Perceived Chance to Succeed. If an ability is decreased so much that the perceive chance of success to achieve a goal by using it becomes nothing, any Illusion of Influence due to the action is lost. If the chance actually is nil, the Decreased Ability can be seen as an Ability Loss and is in conflict with providing players with a Perceived Chance to Succeed. Unlike Ability Loss, Decreased Abilities can be used to affect the Right Level of Difficulty by raising it while retaining the Right Level of Complexity.
Decreased Abilities can be used to negatively define Orthogonal Unit Differentiation. This kind of differentiation typical is an emergent feature due to different levels of Damage or depletion of Resources between Units or players in a team.
Relations
Challenging Gameplay Dynamic Difficulty Adjustment Exaggerated Perception of Influence Units Characters Freedom of Choice Handicap Systems Difficulty Levels Safe Havens Environmental Effects Game Items
Can Instantiate
Balancing Effects, Movement Limitations, Traps
with Ammunition
with Armor
with Equipment
with Improved Abilities
with Time Limits
Can Modulate
with Armor
Can Be Instantiated By
Can Be Modulated By
Possible Closure Effects
Potentially Conflicting With
History
An updated version of the pattern Decreased Abilities 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.