Game thinking from Adam Clare

Tag: #1GAMPage 1 of 5

A Game About Game Ideas

My most recent game is out and you can get it now for iOS and Android! Game Design Improv is all about generating and pitching game ideas!

gamedesignimprovlogo

You can play it as a fun party game or use it to generate game ideas for your own purposes (as in for games you’re making). Inspired partly by Oblique Strategies, the game will help you conquer and creative difficulties you may have! Ok, maybe not all of them – but some. At the very least it can be used to get you out of whatever the equivalent is of a writer’s block for a game designer.

Game Design Improv screen

It’s an evolution of my One Game a Month game of the same name which I made two years ago(!). Indeed you can see the previous version and the most recent version in the screenshots below. It’s obvious the impact good art direction can have, and for that I must thank Samet Choudhury.

Original version of the game idea game

Original version of the game idea game

Game Design Improv screen of game ideas

Game Design Improv

From Wero Creative.

Generate game ideas like never before!

Have fun competing with others to create the best (or just hilarious) game idea! You can also use it on your own for some fun last-minute game jam ideas.

Game Design Improv is a digitized game design exercise which I use to quickly produce ideas for games in all forms. It’s all about quickly creating game ideas based on limited information in a fun way.

Use it to come up with ideas for:
– Video Games
– Escape Games
– Board Games
– Puzzle Games
– Any other games!

The way to play it is to use what’s presented on the screen in a short ~1 minute game pitch. Keep it quick and it works as a fun, quick, useful activity.

This started at Board Game Jam and has evolved into this app you see in front of you now. You really should download it as there is nothing to lose and everything to gain.

Wero Creative wants you to make games! Do whatever you want with the ideas you generate from this app – no restrictions!

Game Design Improv screen of game ideas

Get it now on iOS and Android!

An Experimental Game Designed To Distract You

The distractions in action.

The distractions in action.

For September’s game a month challenge I was inspired by an episode of Spark about how mobile technologies are increasingly distraction us. The gist of the episode is that the more we use mobile tech the more hooked we get on it. There’s nuance in the episode which is worth listening to (Spark episode 258). The segment on notification vacation is what got me thinking:

What if we trained ourselves to ignore notifications?

Here’s Spark’s on why we should care:

The smartphone brings the world to our pockets, but can also bring an obsession with receiving and responding to notifications. Research psychologist Dr. Larry Rosen says the relentless barrage of notifications can have adverse effects on our mental and physical health.

With that in mind, I set out to create an app that will be difficult to ignore. That way one can train themselves to ignore some stimulus from their phone which – in theory – can ultimately help them relax. The less distracted you are by blinking lights and whatnot the easier it is to ignore your phone while it’s in front of you.

Of course, we’re hardwired to be distracted by the audio and visual effects our mobiles generate. So really in some way, this game is a modern version of Sisyphus.

How to Play

Distraction player number

1 Select the number of players at the table (as in people).
2 Start the game.
3 First person to reach for the phone losses.

Winning
The person with the highest recored score wins.

Losing
A player either picks up the device or obviously motions for it. The gyroscope monitors for movement so be careful!

Designing the game

Making it was as simple as creating a little app that is visually noisy and can simulate standard notifications one normally receives. I did this using Unity although I’m sure there are better ways. First I looked into basic app making tools but none of them had the core function I needed of adding points based on time.

Why have points? Well, in order to make it feel more game-like I took the easy route and added a high score to the app. Hopefully this extrinsic motivation will serve as a motivator and as a metric for the player. To encourage play in a public setting the score increases faster based on how many people are around.

In play testing all the things that I thought would work did; it’s always nice when that happens. When testing it people had nifty ideas to further distract the player. One suggestion was to make it an alarm sound blare whenever the phone is moved.

Distractions

An early screen shot

An early screen shot

Once the game begins the mobile is told to vibrate, change colours, display random text and so on. To make it more visually impactful I also made the app ugly (which turned out to be very easy for me).

There’s also a button labelled “PRESS” which is so very tempting to press. It’s worth touching it.

Due to the way I made the distractions I’m under the impression that the app goes against the Apple design guidelines, so there’s no way it would make it through the approval process. I could put it out for Android though…

Next Steps:

I don’t plan to continue working on this at the moment. Maybe that will change in the future, for now here’s what I would do the app:

  • UI-specific notifications
  • More pop-ups
  • Better math behind the scoring
  • Using Bluetooth to find other players running the app

My previous #1GAM games:

January – Gnome Oppressor
February – Village of Cards
March – AstroDoge
April – Scapa Flow
May – Das Game
August – Game Design Improv

Page 1 of 5

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén