Goals or no goals?
There are many years of gaming history. Sorry for the typo because this is what I meant to convey:
Most of the best selling PC and console games have had clear primary objectives and reward the gamer for continued play.
I am not talking necessarily about the current leaders. I apologize for the misunderstanding.
Clinton
Most of the best selling PC and console games have had clear primary objectives and reward the gamer for continued play.
I am not talking necessarily about the current leaders. I apologize for the misunderstanding.
Clinton
[quote name='3Ddreamer' timestamp='1351123475' post='4993596']
Most of the best selling PC and console games have clear primary objectives and reward the gamer for continued play.
Clinton
Got any data to back such a claim? The sims and the sims 2 are the two top selling PC games of all times, with the sims 3 and minecraft also being in the top 10 and simcity 3000 just outside of the top 10(according to wikipedia). These are all games with no clearly defined goals, but they do seem to sell on a massive scale, so be careful with statements like the one you made in your post.
[/quote]
No data is necessary because it is only a miscommunication.
I look at gross sales in dollar amount as being more important than numbers of copies sold. My view is also that the history of top games over the decades is more important than the last year or two in a sense of the permanent desirables.
Some games have had hundreds of millions or more than a billion dollars in gross sales in recent years, so there is more than one way to measure sales.
People are obviously willing to pay more money per game if there are objectives and rewards, speaking in a general sense, though we all know there are exceptions and exceptional games.
Clinton
Games without goals are usually harder to make fun, than games with clear goals. Simply because your game has to offer a lot of stuff to do, so the goals are emergent. A simple game like tetris can't be fun without predefined goals.
I would recommend staying away from sandboxes unless you have clear understanding of what you are doing.
I would recommend staying away from sandboxes unless you have clear understanding of what you are doing.
First, some background for my comments: some people use the presence or absence of goals to define something as a game or a toy: games are activities with goals to be achieved, while toys are simply objects to be played with. By that definition, SimCity, Minecraft, and the like are toys, not games. A ball is a toy to be played with; basketball is a game to be won.
God games are toys with goals appended. It's like finding a ball with instructions on how to have fun with it.
[quote name='sunandshadow' timestamp='1351040437' post='4993297']
I generally prefer goals. Games like The Sims seem great in concept, but I always end up quitting them before I have seen all the content because I don't get any feedback or recognition on my self-chosen goals, or I discover I have self-chosen a goal which is actually impossible within the program, and I just don't have ant reason to care about exploring the remaining content, nor any efficient path to see what I haven't seen yet.
I've been thinking a lot lately about this idea of consuming content and what it means to game developers. Is a game not "finished" until the player has consumed all its content? Is a game "finished" as soon as the player has consumed it all? To what degree does content consumption equate to finishing? Is it when the player completes the game's primary goal?
I'll use my own experience as an example of what these questions mean. I played WoW during its closed beta and continued to play for a few years after its release. I took a break for a couple years, then I eventually came back and played through the first expansion. But then an interesting thing happened. I felt done. I had completed the game, consumed all its content. I knew there was still fun to be had and progress to be made through PvP, battlegrounds, raids, etc. But I had no drive to do those things. I had completed my goal for the game, which I only then realized I had set for myself: to see the Warcraft world and explore it. When I recognized that goal and that I had achieved it, I left the game and never went back. Since then, no MMO has been able to hold my attention for more than a few months.
[/quote]
Well, there are different ways to define finished. Is it when the player stops playing, even if they don't feel satisfied? Is it when the player feels satisfied, even if they keep playing? Is a game necessarily one big piece of entertainment, or might some games more usefully be compared to a series of novels or something like the Marvel or DC comicverse which maintains several parallel comic series? Possibly the player could "finish" something several times over the course of playing a game, but then start something new or have already started something new. Some players don't care about experiencing all the content, or care about some kinds of content and not others. Some games make it impossible for the player to experience all the content in a single play-through. Some games have a set amount of official content but encourage players to create additional content and assist the players in distributing this content to each other. Different players may have a different idea of what the game's main goal is too: can't tell you how many breeding sim/monster capturing type games I've started with the goal of collecting one of every creature, only to find that the game doesn't allow this or acknowledge that players might want to do it. And I think I've twice stopped playing an MMO after getting an awesome mount because that became my main goal, and once I had achieved it I didn't find something new to pursue.
Different player's may have a different idea of what the game's main goal is too: can't tell you how many breeding sim/monster capturing type games I've started with the goal of collecting one of every creature, only to find that the game doesn't allow this or acknowledge that players might want to do it.
Interesting. It sounds like the game mechanics suggested a goal implicitly, but then it turns out the goal wasn't actually achievable? Like not being able to catch all the Pokemon without trading? Or is it more like not providing enough storage space for all them?
[quote name='sunandshadow' timestamp='1351197850' post='4993917']
Different player's may have a different idea of what the game's main goal is too: can't tell you how many breeding sim/monster capturing type games I've started with the goal of collecting one of every creature, only to find that the game doesn't allow this or acknowledge that players might want to do it.
Interesting. It sounds like the game mechanics suggested a goal implicitly, but then it turns out the goal wasn't actually achievable? Like not being able to catch all the Pokemon without trading? Or is it more like not providing enough storage space for all them?
[/quote]
Usually it's a lack of storage space, since trading pokemon is sort of within the game - no one would bat an eye at that if it were in an online game where it's easier to find a trading partner, it's just a PITA in a mostly singleplayer offline game. But even if there's enough storage space, the game doesn't acknowledge the player's collecting efforts with achievements or quests and rewards, or even NPC dialogue.
I'm not sure whether the game mechanics implicitly suggest collecting, or if it's more true to say that many humans have a natural urge to collect, especially things that have one base type with lots of variations. Certainly everyone who works to build a collection wants to have it be praised by others, whether those others are NPCs or other players.
I enjoy both kinds of games, but I consistently spend more time with games that let me ignore their goals for my own, or which provide many other goals over and on top of "The Story."
Skyrim is a pretty good example. I've played the game with a few different characters, and one of them has reached very high levels without progressing very far in the main storyline. At no point did I feel like the world was stunted because of this. I can have a full and fun game experience without the main quest.
Dwarf Fortress is perhaps the ultimate in "Set your own goals" and I have correspondingly poured hours of my life into it designing and building megaprojects, modding, and challenging myself to survive different scenarios.
I think that the ability to set one's own goals makes the game more apt as a story generator, letting the player create a story through playing, rather than just a story teller passing on the writing of somebody else.
Skyrim is a pretty good example. I've played the game with a few different characters, and one of them has reached very high levels without progressing very far in the main storyline. At no point did I feel like the world was stunted because of this. I can have a full and fun game experience without the main quest.
Dwarf Fortress is perhaps the ultimate in "Set your own goals" and I have correspondingly poured hours of my life into it designing and building megaprojects, modding, and challenging myself to survive different scenarios.
I think that the ability to set one's own goals makes the game more apt as a story generator, letting the player create a story through playing, rather than just a story teller passing on the writing of somebody else.
It is easy for market forces to cause a demand for video toys instead of video games -not meant to offend anybody. There is still a little boy in me, too, and I like to take a break from more mature game challenges to let the little boy in me loose once in a while.
Am I adult enough to enjoy the highly goal oriented games yet adult enough to let the little boy in me just be spontaneous?
Clinton
Am I adult enough to enjoy the highly goal oriented games yet adult enough to let the little boy in me just be spontaneous?
Clinton
Let's also take a look at Skyrim. The game has it core game goal, finish the game. The game also features many other goals, depending on what the players want to do. (to reach max level as well, to get that new armors, to look awesome, to become very powerful, to explore the whole game, to buy a house and marry an NPC wife, to kill every villager, or to keep playing it with new mods and so on.)
So with Mass Effect, you can beat the game, but you can also have other goals to accomplish as well.
Almost the same with MMOs, core game goal is to finish the game's content (hopefully the developers will keep updating and releasing more contents), apart from that, the game is open and let players make their own goals.
IMO, this is the best and keeps players the longest.
So with Mass Effect, you can beat the game, but you can also have other goals to accomplish as well.
Almost the same with MMOs, core game goal is to finish the game's content (hopefully the developers will keep updating and releasing more contents), apart from that, the game is open and let players make their own goals.
IMO, this is the best and keeps players the longest.
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