God Views

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Players are given a view of the game independent of game elements.

This pattern is a still a stub.

Some games do not associate the user's focus of attention in a game with any particular game element. In these games the view the user has of the game is likewise independent of game elements, similar to the omniscience of a God Views.

Examples

Example: SimCity allows players to move around the city without having to consider the locations of any individual game element such as cars or pedestrians.

Example: Populous, as an example of a god game unsurprisingly provides players with God Views.

Europa Universalis series

Hearts of Iron series

Starcraft series

Warcraft series


nearly Asteroids, Centipede, Pac-Man Sokoban


Using the pattern

Similar to Third-Person Views, games with God Views that require Imperfect Information about the terrain in the Game World must either use Fog of War or divide the game area into sections. The use of God Views does not have to be omnipotent; the view of a Game World can easily be restricted by restricting the movement and direction of the Camera use to provide the God View.

Having a God View in a game does not necessarily infer that one is omniscience; Fog of War is quite often used to make it possible for players to experience Surprises even if they have God Views.

First-Person Views and Third-Person Views are not directly compatible with God Views. However, in games where players switch between different Focus Loci, Third-Person Views can replace God Views when Focus Loci have been selected to make it easier to perceive which Focus Loci is used as gameplay unfolds.

God Views can be used to create Public Information that provides Spectators with more information about the gameplay than players have.


Can Be Instantiated By

Cutscenes, Dedicated Game Facilitators

Can Be Modulated By

God Fingers,

Interface Aspects

God Views is an Interface Pattern.

Consequences

God Views provide Game State Overviews over Game Worlds and allow these overviews to be easily and quickly moved, making them ideal for Attention Swapping but hindering Spatial Engrossment and making Aim & Shoot actions difficult. They do not easily work with Avatars as the link between player attention and the Avatars is weak, but in games with Third-Person Views it is possible to use God Views without this issue to do general navigation and support the movement between Focus Loci that are to be controlled.

God Views can influence the Freedom of Choice players have both by allowing them to vary their view on the gameplay and by making it easier to spot the actual possible actions they have.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Game State Overviews, Public Information

Can Modulate

Attention Swapping, Freedom of Choice, Game Worlds

with Third-Person Views

Focus Loci

Can Be Instantiated By

Cutscenes, Dedicated Game Facilitators

Can Be Modulated By

God Fingers, Third-Person Views

Possible Closure Effects

-

Potentially Conflicting With

Aim & Shoot, Avatars, Spatial Engrossment

History

An updated version of the pattern God Views that was part of the original collection in the book Patterns in Game Design[1].

References

  1. Björk, S. & Holopainen, J. (2004) Patterns in Game Design. Charles River Media. ISBN1-58450-354-8.

Acknowledgements

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