Time Pressure

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That gameplay imposes a sense of need for complete actions or goals quickly.

Whenever players need to complete an activity with limited time they may feel Time Pressure.

Examples

Each turn in the board game Ricochet Robots put players in the situation where they not only have to try and find a solution on how to solve a problem but also do so quicker than the other players.

Using the pattern

Time Limits can naturally cause Time Pressure but only if they are part of Committed Goals. These can then easily be communicated to players through Alarms, which may or may not clearly express needs to be done hastily or what the consequences of failing will be.

While Time Limits give external reasons for Time Pressure, Interruptible Actions or any type of Continuous Goals (that is, continuous goals can be used even if they are not Committed Goals) can be used to created internal reasons.

Diegetic Aspects

Text about how the pattern relates to diegetic elements of the presentation of the game; primarily useful in mechanical patterns

Interface Aspects

Time Pressure can be either implicitly or explicitly imposed on players. Having Goal Indicators and Game State Indicators while it is possible to succeed gives explicit Time Pressure while showing these after a failure can provide Near Miss Indicators.

Consequences

Putting players under Time Pressure limits the time they can be under Analysis Paralysis, but may also cause it.

Relations

Instantiates

Analysis Paralysis

Modulates

Instantiated By

Alarms, Continuous Goals, Interruptible Actions, Time Limits

Modulated By

Goal Indicators, Game State Indicators, Right Level of Complexity

Potentially Conflicting With

Analysis Paralysis

History

New pattern created in this wiki.

References