Player Physical Prowess

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Players' abilities to perform physical activities are used to determine the outcome of a game.

Games can provide both mental and physical challenges to players. Those that do the latter benefit Player Physical Prowess, but this can be done in several different ways. Common examples include testing players' strength, their endurance, their precision, their reflexes, or a combination of these.

Examples

Sports such as Soccer, Decathlon, and Marathons are examples of games where different types of Player Physical Prowess are critical to how well one can participate. Games which make players mimic the activities of physical activities, e.g. Wii Sports and Dance Dance Revolution series, also tend to make the mimicking activities in physically demanding ones. Games that require quick eye-hand coordination, e.g. Counter-Strike or the Tekken series, also require Player Physical Prowess even if they may not be as physically exhausting.

The performance of runners in Can You See Me Now? is dependent on Player Physical Prowess since they need to quickly move around in a real world city.

Using the pattern

Specific ways of requiring Player Physical Prowess in games include using Dexterity-Based Actions (which are important in First-Person Shooters such as the Quake and Doom series), strength tests (as in Weightlifting), and endurance tests (as in for example Marathons and Ironman Triathlons). Mimetic Interfaces that copy activities that require physical skills is another apparent way to insert the pattern in a game. Time Limits can be used to restrict for how long players have to be able to maintain a certain activity and thereby the requirements of Player Physical Prowess.

Simply having Player-Location Proximity as part of a game may introduce requirements of Player Physical Prowess into a game if it is important who reaches the location first or it is important in which order players arrive there.

Interface Aspects

Quite obviously, games using Player Physical Prowess needs some way of measuring the players' physical activities. This can be either through letting the players physical interact with the game system or through having sensors that measure their activities.

Consequences

Since the physical abilities are often ones that can be improved, Player Physical Prowess offers one route for players to develop Game Mastery. However, the pattern may work against Social Adaptability since both players' abilities and their possibilities to improve depends quite heavily their inclination. It also makes the use of Proxy Players problematic since it is no longer the players' physical skills that are tested during gameplay.

Since Player Physical Prowess makes players perform physical activities, it is likely to lead to the Extra-Game Consequences of training of these, which may include physical exercise. Taking another perspective, the pattern can be seen as instantiating Real Life Activities Affect Game State since players actually need to do specific physical activities themselves to affect the game.

In games with Physical Navigation, the presence of Player Physical Prowess affects players' ability to be the first to reach the goal locations.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Extra-Game Consequences, Game Mastery, Real Life Activities Affect Game State

Can Modulate

Physical Navigation

Can Be Instantiated By

Dexterity-Based Actions, Mimetic Interfaces, Player-Location Proximity

Can Be Modulated By

Time Limits

Possible Closure Effects

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Potentially Conflicting With

Proxy Players, Social Adaptability

History

Updated version of the pattern Player Physical Prowess first described in the report Game Design Patterns for Mobile Games[1].

References

  1. Davidsson, O., Peitz, J. & Björk, S. (2004). Game Design Patterns for Mobile Games. Project report to Nokia Research Center, Finland.

Acknowledgements

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