Game thinking from Adam Clare

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Random Notes from Digifest 2012

Digifest Toronto 2012 was tons of fun and I’m continuing my attempt to blog my notes and ideas that arise while attending a conference. The last time I tried that was a few weeks at the OARN conference and I still need to go through those notes.

Please be forgiving when reading these notes as I wrote them on an iPad.

Layar

Claire from Layar presented to the conference at large then ran a small session for some George Brown students which I was fortunate enough to attend.
For some quick context, Layar is an augmented reality (AR) company that made a big splash a few years ago but more recently they have refocused. A big change for Layar was the decision to be focus on what they call interactive text.

  • Claire encourages everyone to “rethink print” and realize that print will always be around.
  • For designers at Layar, one of their big worries are users asking “Is that all there is?”
  • Claire echoes the idea that user testing is the most important thing. Be particularly aware that screen size and touch interfaces may appear large enough when building but be too small when in actual use.
  • They tested with a Dutch magazine with and without the Layar logo, it turns out the logo makes a huge difference. A page with their logo gets 8-20x more clicks than a page without it.
  • They are working with Post Media, I wonder what the uptake will be by Canadians as we tend to love things like Twitter and Facebook. Will Layar speak to Canadians in a similar way?
  • Claire acknowledges that right now most uses of Layar are similar to a fancy QR code but they want to go further than that. (I’m not a fan of QR codes for consumers). Claire wants content that bridges the digital and the physical in the spirit of the brand (or message). Think beyond the QR code.
  • Layar Creator allows people without coding skill to create their own Layar experience. Layars can be created on almost any page.
  • If there are multiple people creating on the same page (think a magazine cover) not every Layar is shown at once, the users picks which one to load. It will not work on anything dynamic.
  • They want to change retail. Picture someone buying a video game and they scan the retail version of the game with Layar and up pops online stores like Amazon displaying the price of the game there. Interestingly enough this last issue didn’t arise at the OARN conference.

Marv Wolfman and Warren Spector on Epic Mickey

  • Kids and adults played Epic Mickey, split 50/50 (also 50/50 men/women). The sequel is co-op which makes me think it’ll be like co-viewing TV for some families.
  • Mickey has evolved over the years and has changed appearances in one medium to the next. Obvious point, but he had some excellent examples.
  • When working on a licensed character, you are obliged to figure out what it is about that character that define it and why should it be brought into a video game. What aspects of the character are best represented in video games.
  • Mickey’s default pose didn’t work as he didn’t look like an action hero and his arms would disappear when the camera would be rotated (hard to distinguish arms from body on side view).
  • Mickey’s ears always face the viewer and the model need to reflect that. These concerns led to a very complex rig setup for the model to make sure Mickey looked right.
  • They decided that the core game is about choice and consequences not puzzles. The game was designed around ensuring good art direction matched to the player’s goals. Thus the paint brush can make things fuller or thiner
  • Designed around the Wii controller, now they’re taking the sequel to all platforms. Unfortunately no talk about the controller.
  • Sees the alpha stage of a game just making things work, then after alpha it’s all about making the game fun.
  • At the end of the game “If two players have the same experience then we have failed.”
  • I get the feeling Epic Mickey exists just because young people aren’t exposed to Mickey except as an icon of Disney – there’s no emotive connection like previous generations would have had.

Morihiro Harano
A strategic consultant and from the marketing agency Party.

Here’s the sort of nifty thing they do at Party:

  • They made a really cool live stream of an interactive music video.
  • Encourages designers to look into places that most people don’t in order to stand out. For example for a credit card company they decided to add a layer of customization rather than an ad campaign.
  • What they found was there was a 1.6x increase in credit card usage when people chose what design to be on their card. Harano says it’s because people own the process and have an emotional connection to it.
  • They see that in their better-performing marketing campaigns they tend to create a new “ecosystem,” or what seems to me to be a new business idea exploiting their existing business. I didn’t get a chance to ask him if they find that they pitch more business concepts than marketing concepts.
  • They use a creative director plus tech director. In other marketing firms, the copywriter works just underneath the creative director, at Party the TD supplants the copywriter. Their TD is all about prototyping first and just trying it.
  • To cap it all off they made this cool AR-esque game for kids:

 

Panel on diversity in video games

  • The hours of a constant crunch time put a larger strain on women in the games industry than men due to societal expectations that women do more “at home.”
  • Games are a monoculture right now, we need games to be more diverse to reflect the human experience.
  • A few times they mention that the problems in the games industry is not unique. Even the tech industry has changed to a point to there are many women tech CEOs, we need that in gaming.
  • AAA games have become stagnant and aren’t examining new mechanics so there is room there for new innovative games. This is in reference to games ignoring broken mechanics by dressing up the graphics.
  • On meritocracy in industry: the people who define merit are those on top. Usually there is another value system working underneath the meritocracy. We ought to address these value systems because we are doing a disservice to our peers by ignoring the values that need to be questioned.
  • Apparently the Saints Row series is a subversive game because we can be transgressive players. You can play as any gender you like and create a new (perceived) meritocracy.
  • A few times its been mentioned that many women play, but they lack games are made by/for women. Games coloured pink don’t count it.
  • Things like DMG send a message that is “yes, games are a thing that you can participate in” and provide a place of safe exploration of games.
  • Some people don’t realize that they have game making skills (like animation and music) because the conversation about making games is too focused on programming.
  • There’s an unadvertised female character who is awesome in Borderlands?
  • Anna: indiecade is more diverse than GDC because they made a point to engage communities not generally represented in the gaming community.
  • Alex: People need to be explicitly invited, you can’t just do a “call out”. Make them feel welcome. Diversity takes a lot of effort – you need to approach people who are different than you – it’s hard.
  • What the panelists are talking about is not a new problem, it’s a very old problem going back hundreds (thousands) of years. We need to remember our history so we can learn from how people before us dealt with encouraging change.
  • We need to celebrate and share their work if they are from marginalized communities to show others that they too can create games. What about people who don’t want to publicly be making games?
  • Does greater realism in games encourage more gender stereotypes?
  • An ongoing theme/question for the panelists is that Half of gamers are women, why don’t they openly say they’re gamers?
  • At the end of the day games are not made by corporations, they are made by people.

Other random notes:

  • People from traditional media production seem to only understand new technologies when you attach it to storytelling. This is an improvement from when I first started in “new media” when traditional media people just didn’t get anything (of course, some people obviously got it).
  • Even when it comes to marketing it comes down to a good story.
  • People like things that look real (but not too real I suspect given the uncanny valley).
  •  A few times people who work in TV or film have noticed that the volume of traditional media work has been shrinking in their line of work. This doesn’t seem to be a problem yet; however, I wonder if what happened to newspapers this past decade will happen to TV this decade.
  • ToonBoom was an exhibitor and they make professional and consumer level 2D animation software.
  • Mozilla webmaker looks really cool. Mark Surman’s presentation on it showed the cool education aspect of the tool can be. On his blog he has webmaker explained.

Good Trailers for Good Entertainment

In many ways the gaming industry can learn from the film industry and game trailers are a great example of an area that game developers should be taking notes.

When studios drop insanely huge amounts of money on making movies that will inevitably be bad they spend potentially even more money on advertising it. A good trailer communicates what to expect in the final product, this is true for films and games. The problem is that there is no clear formula for a good trailer and Hollywood regularly messes things up.

When trailers are bad it means that the film is a) bad or b) not going to be watched by people. The best example of this is for the movie John Carter, take a look at this trailer and try to figure out what the movie is about.

Over at Vulture they have an in-depth analysis of why the bad trailers for John Carter ensured the movie would perform badly at the box office.

A trailer needs to tell its own story and ideally doesn’t give away too much of the overall story of the movie/game. The key is also to make sure that the caliber of the game and trailer match up, this is similar in concept to how movie trailers have a different feel based on the genre.

Dead Island’s trailer was apparently way better than the game and this disconnect led to great disappointment for some players.

When it comes to genres there are tons of trailers that use the style of one sort of trailer to make a movie appear the opposite to what is. My favourite one of these has to be the Shining remade into a romantic comedy.

So at the end of the day how does one go about actually making a trailer for their game that respects the above? Fortunately for you somebody has created the ultimate guide to making a video game trailer and it’s really good.

This is the TL;DR from the guide:

Capture High Quality Gameplay Footage

  • Set aside at least a full day to capture your footage.
  • It takes a long time to capture good gameplay “moments”.
  • Use High quality software and capture with as little video compression as possible.

Engage and Entertain your Audience

  • Don’t think of your trailer as an ad, because you’ll focus on too many things
  • Make something entertaining, and focus on one core aspect of your game
  • Resist the urge to show off every feature and aspect of the game
  • Ensure the quality level and tone of your trailer matches your game

Tease the viewer that what they’ve seen is only a glimpse of what’s to come

  • Don’t overwhelm the viewer with information
  • Don’t give too much away
  • Keep your trailer Short (under 90 seconds), Simple, To the point.

Create a story with your trailer

  • Give it a beginning, middle and end.
  • Try to treat your trailer like a very short film.
  • Give your trailer structure, and build to some sort of payoff or resolution at the end.

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