Focus Loci

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The game elements through which a player's actions are taken.

This pattern is a still a stub.

Focus Loci, the locations of thefocus, are the game elements through which players can affect the game state. The most obvious Focus Loci are the game elements that can be moved by the player, and the actions they provide are the possibility of moving them.

Examples

Example: Each piece in Chess acts as a Focus Loci for the players by providing a number of potential actions.

Example: The stones used in Go are only Focus Loci when they are being placed on the board, since players cannot perform any other actions through them later.

Example: The Avatar that a player controls in a first-person shooter is the Focus Loci they have in the game.

Example: Various types of mouse cursors used in real-time strategy games and Sims games are Focus Loci that allow players to move between units and characters, which in their turn are also Focus Loci.

Using the pattern

The four main options for Focus Loci are Avatar, Units, Characters, and God's Fingers. The first three can maintain a Consistent Reality Logic, but the actions they provide are then restricted by the Alternative Reality of the game. They also allow points within the game for players to have Identification with. The use of Characters allows players to have Focus Loci without the need for Game Worlds. The use of several Focus Loci through Units allows single players to simulate Team Play but requires Attention Swapping and Status Indicators to show where the Focus Loci are in the Game World. As the swapping between Units is often done by explicit actions performed from a Third-Person View, this Third-Person View can actually be seen as a form of Focus Loci. God's Fingers are most often used to allow players to have Game State Overview and to let them do Attention Swapping between other Focus Loci but can be used to provide the god-like actions found in god games.

Although not as common as the three main options, Cards can, especially in collectable card games, be Focus Loci either when being played or by being in play and giving a player New Abilities. Book-Keeping Tokens whose presences indicate that a player has New Abilities are another form of more unusual Focus Loci. Dice are seldom Focus Loci except in pure dice games, since using them is not usually an activity affecting the game directly but rather determining how actions are to be performed.

The choice of Focus Loci and the actions they support dictate which game elements players have Indirect Control over.

Can Be Instantiated By

Agents, Avatars, Bookkeeping Tokens, Characters, God Fingers, Player Characters, Units

Can Be Modulated By

Clickability, Game State Indicators, Geospatial Game Widgets, Line of Sight, Mini-maps, New Abilities

Diegetic Aspects

Interface Aspects

Focus Loci is an Interface Pattern.

Narrative Aspects

The specific choice of Focus Loci used in a game can affect which type of Narration Structures are suitable. For example, Detective Structures is difficult to use with God Fingers or Units since they allow players information from a non-diegetic perspective or from several different diegetic individuals.

Consequences

Focus Loci are game elements that provide methods for players to affect Game Worlds, and are in many cases diegetically present in the Game Worlds themselves.

These Focus Loci support Cognitive Immersion, and in some cases, Spatial Immersion. The Focus Loci that are not defined as part of the Game World primarily support Cognitive Immersion but can also support Sensory-Motoric Immersion.

Providing multiple Focus Loci affects the Risk/Reward tradeoffs that have to be made when initiating Extended Actions.

Focus Loci] can affect the Game World usually by affecting themselves, other game elements, or the environment in their immediate vicinity, for example, to gain Area Control in the latter case.

Can Modulate

Area Control

Relations

Can Instantiate

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Can Modulate

Area Control

Can Be Instantiated By

Agents, Avatars, Bookkeeping Tokens, Characters, God Fingers, Player Characters, Units

Can Be Modulated By

Clickability, Game State Indicators, Geospatial Game Widgets, Line of Sight, Mini-maps, New Abilities

Possible Closure Effects

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Potentially Conflicting With

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History

An updated version of the pattern Focus Loci 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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