Breaking Open the Black Box

The Secrets and Stories of Game Design

Pages

  • Game Design Lessons
  • Learning From My Past
  • Post-Mortems
  • Who am I?
Follow @Xelnath [mc4wp_form]

Powered by Genesis

Archives for 2012.07.28

Tuning: a Tool to Adjust Care Level

2012.07.28 by Xelnath

Tuning is the first and most powerful lesson of the Wyatt Cheng school of Game Design. Are you ready?
“Any mechanic, no matter how lame, is considered fun when sufficiently overpowered.” – Wyatt Cheng


It is extremely important to note that this lesson is a WARNING to new game designers. It is important to not confuse good mechanics with overpowered ones. Tuning is a tool which must be used wisely.
If you want to increase how much the player cares about your mechanic, change its tuning. Tuning is a deep topic I intend to discuss multiple times in greater depth, but here’s a quick litmus test for tuning any game mechanic:

Step 1: Observe the Status Quo

Do players enjoy the mechanic as-is? Do they respond with excitement or disinterest?  If they haven’t even identified that the mechanic exists, you have a clarity problem and need to work on that. If they have noticed it, move on to the next step.

Step 2: Maximize the Power

When your game mechanic has the power to obliterate everything on the screen do they enjoy and use it? How do they feel about it? What bad side effects does it cause?  
If players don’t enjoy a mechanic, even when it results in overwhelming power, it’s a very good candidate for cutting or heavily revising.  Maximized power is proof that something is awkward, unclear or otherwise innately flawed.

Step 3: Minimize the Power

Next try to push the mechanic as weak as you possibly can. How far can you go before players stop caring and discard it? Knowing that limit will help you identify how far the usability, clarity and theme of the ability can carry you.  
You would be amazed at how far an incredibly clear, visceral and fantasy satisfying ability or mechanic can take you. If you find that you have very little flexibility to push a mechanic’s tuning downward, there’s probably a deep flaw in either your design or the scenario in which your design exists.

Step 4: If you can’t make Step 2 or Step 3 work… Stop Here!

If you find yourself constantly trying to find a number that works, but nothing reasonable is in the cards… STOP.  Numbers alone are never enough, but if the mechanic just doesn’t work on both extremes, you’ve got a deeper problem. 
Either your problem space is over constrained or you’re trying to force something to fit that just isn’t ready for showtime. Take it back to the drawing board, ask for input and look for alternatives.

Step 5: Balance the Power with the Clarity and Usability

Now that you know your limits, use what you know to pick the right spot for your ability.

The easier an ability to use, the less powerful it should be. The more difficult it is to observe, the less powerful it should be. These are the grey areas in which your will and judgement as a designer comes into play.

Step 6: Beware the Theme

While a deep enough topic for another time, be wary of your Theme.

Consider for example, an explosion. In the real world, an actual explosion is a very dangerous thing. A ball of fire would nearly kill or at least permanently injure anyone actually struck by it. While Super Mario 1 could get away with that, other games cannot.

Thus it’s important to try to give enough power to satisfy the expectations of the player, while keeping the value of the ability within the safe constraints of your game. If your fireball can only ever do a tiny amount of damage… consider changing the theme of the ability and make sure the art reflects its lack of power. Choose a tiny spark of light and not a nuclear holocaust.

(P.S.  My personal word of advice for multiplayer games is start as low as possible, then tune up until people consistently care and mention it, then nerf it by about 10% if it’s a player-used ability and buff it by about 25% if it’s a monster ability. )

Tuning is more than Power

It’s easy to be distracted by power. Tuning is frequently about adjusting power. But there’s a second, equally – if not more – important factor in tuning: time.
The Witch Doctor
A friend once asked me, “Hey Alex, Warlocks in World of Warcraft and Witch Doctors in Diablo 3 seem to have a lot in common. Were the same people designing it?”
My initial reaction was to just answer him, “Oh, no, of course not, but you know, we at Blizzard are full of common practices and do many things the same way! I’m so flattered you can’t tell the difference. Ah ha ha ha! Look at how awesome we are!” 
Then I thought maybe I could reply, “No, of course not! They are drastically different in both mechanics and kit! What kind of nonsense is this!” 
… but thankfully, I didn’t do either. Instead, my curiosity overrode my pride and I instead tried to understand him first. 
The Warlock
“That’s a really interesting comment, Steve*. Why do you say that?” (*name changed to protect the innocent)
“Well, I noticed that a lot of the spells do damage over time like Warlock DoTs and so I thought, maybe the same guy worked on it.”
“Well, Steve, you know… we do share a lot of philosophies and ideas at work, but you know when it comes to damage, we game designers really only have 2 tools.”
“Which are?”
“We either do all of the damage right now – or all of it spread out over time.”

Frequency

The second tool of tuning is frequency.  The frequency at which an event occurs can drastically change how the player feels about it. 
Imagine if the Star was as common and lasted as long as the Mushroom in Super Mario Bros. 1. 
The majority of your play experience would be something like this:
  • Play carefully until you get a star
  • Run recklessly around the level, killing everything
  • If you fall into a hole, die or otherwise lose the star, you become irate and frustrated until the next Star comes along.
With that change, suddenly the Star ceases to be a bonus and becomes a mandatory part of how you play. 
Instead, look at how Nintendo designed it:
  • You generally play very carefully until you learn a level
  • Slowly over time, your mastery over the level increases and you can play more recklessly
  • While exploring, you occasionally find Stars which allow you to play recklessly for 10 seconds.
The result is that Stars allow you an early taste of what will be possible once you’ve mastered the level, and give you a period of reduced tension and greater enjoyment. 
None of that would have been possible if Stars were common or long. 

Tuning is Not Everything

Power and frequency alone do not define what makes players love an ability. 
Consider the following two abilities:
Fireball – Deals 100 damage instantly. 10 second cooldown.
Corruption – Deals 15 damage every second. Limit 1 per target.
Pure math will show that Corruption is 50% better than Fireball. However, even given that difference in power, the average game player will greatly prefer the Fireball and be disinterested in Corruption. 
Furthermore, in many real situations, that decision will be 100% right. …Why?
The answer is surprisingly deep. I’ll talk about the first piece next time, as we explore my next topic: Responses.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Archives

  • August 2022
  • July 2019
  • October 2018
  • May 2018
  • February 2018
  • June 2017
  • February 2017
  • November 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • May 2016
  • March 2016
  • December 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • January 2014
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • January 2012
  • September 1816