Difference between revisions of "Asymmetric Gameplay"

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Many [[:Category:Roleplaying Games|Roleplaying Games]], e.g. [[Dungeons & Dragons]] and [[World of Warcraft]], provide [[Asymmetric Gameplay]] through letting players create characters to control that each have different abilities and roles depending on choices such as profession and race.
 
Many [[:Category:Roleplaying Games|Roleplaying Games]], e.g. [[Dungeons & Dragons]] and [[World of Warcraft]], provide [[Asymmetric Gameplay]] through letting players create characters to control that each have different abilities and roles depending on choices such as profession and race.
  
The board game [[Vast: The Crystal Caverns]] provides each player with very different goals and actions, one being that of a dragon, another being that of knight, and a third being that of the cave in which the others move about.  
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The board game [[Vast: The Crystal Caverns]] provides each player with very different goals and actions, one being that of a dragon, another being that of knight, and a third being that of the cave in which the others move about. Other board games providing players with very asymmetrical gameplay include [[Ogre]] and [[Space Hulk]]. Both let one player control significantly more units than the other and [[Space Hulk]] puts time limits on one player but not on the other. A weaker example can be found in [[Memoir '44]] where the asymmetry consists of differences in types and numbers of "command cards" (and to a lesser degree units).
  
 
== Using the pattern ==
 
== Using the pattern ==

Revision as of 18:05, 13 March 2018

The one-sentence "definition" that should be in italics.

This pattern is a still a stub.

Examples

Many Roleplaying Games, e.g. Dungeons & Dragons and World of Warcraft, provide Asymmetric Gameplay through letting players create characters to control that each have different abilities and roles depending on choices such as profession and race.

The board game Vast: The Crystal Caverns provides each player with very different goals and actions, one being that of a dragon, another being that of knight, and a third being that of the cave in which the others move about. Other board games providing players with very asymmetrical gameplay include Ogre and Space Hulk. Both let one player control significantly more units than the other and Space Hulk puts time limits on one player but not on the other. A weaker example can be found in Memoir '44 where the asymmetry consists of differences in types and numbers of "command cards" (and to a lesser degree units).

Using the pattern

Asymmetric Gameplay is typically used in a game design to provide Varied Gameplay. It is typically designed as part of a game through a more specific pattern, e.g. Asymmetric Abilities, Asymmetric Goals, Asymmetric Information, Asymmetric Resource Distribution, Asymmetric Roles, or Asymmetric Starting Conditions

Naturally, Asymmetric Gameplay is in conflict with having Symmetry on the same level in a game.

Consequences

As stated above, Asymmetric Gameplay creates Varied Gameplay. It typically through this also provides Replayability as long as not all types of gameplay are guaranteed to be exhausted within a game instance.

Relations

Can Instantiate

Replayability, Varied Gameplay

Can Modulate

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Can Be Instantiated By

Asymmetric Abilities, Asymmetric Goals, Asymmetric Information, Asymmetric Resource Distribution, Asymmetric Roles, Asymmetric Starting Conditions

Can Be Modulated By

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Possible Closure Effects

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Potentially Conflicting With

Symmetry

History

New pattern created in this wiki.

References

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Acknowledgements

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