Loot

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Random items found in game worlds that function as rewards.

This pattern is a still a stub.

Examples

Dungeons & Dragons Dragon Age series

Borderlands

Drakborgen should an inverse example of the pattern; players try to get into a dragon's lair and get as much Loot as possible before it awakens.

Using the pattern

The two primary considerations for designing Loot is when players should receive them and what they should consist of.

The most common source for Loot is Enemies that drop them when they are killed, as for example found in Dungeons & Dragons, Borderlands and the Dragon Age series. Other sources include Non-Player Characters but any type of Inhabitants that can be the target for Eliminate goals can work.


Randomness is a core part of Loot; if what Loot is acquired is completely known in advance the design instead becomes the more general Resources instead.


This does not mean that Loot needs to be completely random among all possible game elements, the exact composition of any given Loot may be bounded to maintain Diegetic Consistency and to maintain Red Queen Dilemma.

Game Masters

Balancing Effect


Negotiation Betrayal Relayed Reciprocity

Sets

Diegetic Aspects

As mentioned earlier, Diegetic Consistency may influence what type of Loot should be given so not to break come into direct confrontation with it.

Interface Aspects

Narrative Aspects

Consequences

Loot is a type of Resources given as Rewards for completing Eliminate goals. By providing this, they give a motivation for players to engage in Combat (besides any other that may already exist). Since letting Enemies, Inhabitants, or Non-Player Characters provide Loot makes them a possible way to gain Resources, this pairing makes the former into Resource Sources.

When players know about the potential for Loot, and especially if they know something about the distribution between different types of Loot, the pattern gives rise to Anticipation and Stimulated Planning on how to gain it.


"ninja looting"

scavenging

Relations

Can Instantiate

Anticipation, Red Queen Dilemma, Resources, Rewards, Stimulated Planning

with Enemies, Inhabitants, or Non-Player Characters

Resource Sources

Can Modulate

Combat, Eliminate, Enemies, Inhabitants, Non-Player Characters

Can Be Instantiated By

Randomness, Resource Sources

Can Be Modulated By

Diegetic Consistency

Possible Closure Effects

Potentially Conflicting With

History

New pattern created in this wiki.

References

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Acknowledgments

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