Action Caps

From gdp3
Revision as of 11:37, 19 February 2011 by Staffan Björk (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

Limits on the numbers of actions allowed to be used.

Games needs to prevent players from being able to do whatever they wish, since otherwise there is no challenge provides by the games - Suits points to this describing playing or gaming as the voluntary attempt to overcome unnecessary obstacles.[1] Games often solve this by letting players choose from several possible actions but an alternative is to allow players to have to plan for using several actions but having some form of Action Caps so that this is not done without restrictions.

Examples

Pandemic allows players to take 4 actions per turn, which can be moving, treating diseases, or developing vaccines. In Cartagena the only possible action is to move forward buy playing cards or moving backwards to get cards, and players can do between one and three moves per turn. Origins: How We Became Human allow players a number of 'innovation' and 'population' actions each turn depending on how many free slots exist on the respective tracks each player has. The computer-based Fallout series uses a similar form of restriction on actions, in the first two installments through action points and in later ones through a system called 'V.A.T.S'.

Space Hulk provide the marine player with a number of action points each turn for each marine which can be used for moving, turning, shooting, and activating items such as doors. The naturally creates Action Caps but the player has some extra flexibility through having between 1 and 6 extra 'command points'. In Bloodbowl each player have a number of 'players' that each only have one action per turn (move, block, blitz, or pass). The blitz action can only be done by one 'player' per turn so this is a form of Action Caps but if any action if failed in some way the turn passes to the other play which is also a form of Action Caps.

Ravenwood Fair provides many types of actions that players can do, but most of these require resources and the 'energy' one most thematically fits as Action Caps. In addition, players visiting other players' fairs are provided with 5 special energy units per fair per day that can be used to help these other players.

Using the pattern

Action Caps in one sense exist in all games since players are limited on what they can do, with Puzzles such as Jigsaw Puzzle the possible exception. For Real-Times Games this is because players, at least human players, can only perform so many actions during a certain period of time. This leaves few design options for the pattern, and it only becomes interesting to design in Turn-Based Games or Tick-Based Games where players have to consider what actions to do when they can't do all.



Arithmetic Progression

Turnovers Risk/Reward

Randomness

Action Caps can either be applying on the number of actions in total that can be made, or one how many times individual actions can be done. Budgeted Action Points limits how many action can be done

Cooldown

Altruistic Actions

Visits


Diegetic Aspects

Interface Aspects

Narrative Aspects

Consequences

Since actions become a Resource, and quite obviously a Limited Resource, if the number of actions possible to do are limited, Action Caps are a way of creating Resource Caps. As a natural consequence of this, Action Caps leads to Resource Management of the possible actions and considering how to use these provides Stimulated Planning. Even if Action Caps make players plan and can thereby create Analysis Paralysis, it can also work against this by having the number of actions allowed small enough.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Analysis Paralysis, Limited Resources Resource Management, Resources, Resource Caps, Stimulated Planning

with ...

Can Modulate

Turn-Based Games, Tick-Based Games

Can Be Instantiated By

Can Be Modulated By

Possible Closure Effects

Potentially Conflicting With

Analysis Paralysis

History

New pattern created in this wiki.

References

  1. Suits, B. (2005) The Grasshopper: Games, Life and Utopia. Broadview Press. ISBN-10: 155111772X. ISBN-13: 978-1551117720.

Acknowledgements

-