Since I've seen Richard post here and its already on slashdot, this
is probably old news to most of you, but I thought I'd share. Very
interesting read since I aspire to build virtual worlds, and I am
essentially a newbie myself. The full text of the article is
available here:
http://www.gamasutra.com/features/20041103/bartle_pfv.htm
-Will
P.S. Richard, If your reading this; Nice Work, and Erin, If your
reading this, Nice Illustration.
<EdNote: Copy below>
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Soapbox:
Why Virtual Worlds are Designed By Newbies - No, Really!
By Richard A. Bartle
Gamasutra
November 3, 2004
URL:
http://www.gamasutra.com/features/20041103/bartle_01.shtml
Illustration by Erin Mehlos
[Author's note: What I'm calling virtual worlds, you might call
MMORPGs or MMOGs or (if you're a real old-timer) MUDs. Macro replace
with your preference accordingly. Got that? Then I'll begin\u2026]
Introduction
Virtual worlds are being designed by know-nothing newbies, and
there's not a damned thing anyone can do about it. I don't mean
newbie designers, I mean newbie players - first timers. They're
dictating design through a twisted "survival of the
not-quite-fittest" form of natural selection that will lead to a
long-term decay in quality, guaranteed. If you think some of today's
offerings are garbage, just you wait\u2026
Yeah, yeah, you want some justification for this assertion. Even
though I'm in Soapbox mode, I can see that, so I will explain - only
not just yet. First, I'm going to make four general points that I
can string together to build my case. Bear with me on this\u2026
The Newbie Stream
Here's a quote from Victorian author Charles Dickens:
Annual income £20/-/-, annual expenditure £19/19/6, result happiness.
Annual income £20/-/-, annual expenditure £20/-/6, result misery.
Annual income £0, annual expenditure £20,000,000, result There.com.
OK, so maybe he didn't actually write that last line.
What Dickens was actually saying is that, so long as you don't lose
more than you gain, things are good. In our particular case, we're
not talking olde English money, we're talking newbies, although
ultimately, the two amount to one and the same thing.
Now I'm sorry to be the bringer of bad news, people, but here goes
anyway: even for the most compelling of virtual worlds, players will
eventually leave. Don't blame me, I didn't invent reality.
If oldbies leave, newbies are needed to replace them. The newbies
must arrive at the same rate (or better) that the oldbies leave;
otherwise, the population of the virtual world will decline until
eventually no-one will be left to play it.
Point #1: Virtual worlds live or die by their ability to attract
newbies
Newbie Preconceptions
Another quote, this time from the 1989 movie Field of Dreams:
If we build it, they will come.
Well, maybe if you're an Iowa corn farmer who hears voices inside
your head telling you to construct a baseball stadium, but
otherwise\u2026
A virtual world can be fully functioning and free of bugs, but still
be pretty well devoid of players. There are plenty of non-gameplay
reasons why this could happen, but I'm going to focus on the most
basic: lack of appeal. Some virtual worlds just aren't attractive to
newbies. There are some wonderfully original, joyous virtual worlds
out there. They're exquisitely balanced, rich in depth, abundant in
breadth, alive with subtleties, and full of wise, interesting, fun
people who engender an atmosphere of mystique and marvel without
compare. Newbies would love these virtual worlds, but they're not
going to play them.
Why not? Because they're all text. Newbies don't do text.
Newbies come to virtual worlds with a set of preconceptions acquired
from other virtual worlds; or, failing that, from other computer
games; or, failing that, from gut instinct. They will not consider
virtual worlds that confront these expectations if there are others
around that don't.
Put another way, if a virtual world has a feature that offends
newbies, the developers will have to remove that feature or they
won't get any newbies. This is irrespective of what the oldbies
think: they may adore a feature, but if newbies don't like it then
(under point #1) eventually there won't be anyone left to adore it.
Point #2: Newbies won't play a virtual world that has a major
feature they don't like.
Not-So-Newbies
Here's another quote (kind of), from a private study of 1,100
players by the Themis Group. Themis's researchers asked veterans of
3 or more virtual worlds how many months they'd spent in their first
one and how many months they'd spent in their second one. Dividing
the second figure by the first, we get these averages for time spent
in the second virtual world compared to the first:
EverQuest 80%
Ultima Online 70%
Asheron's Call 70%
Dark Age of Camelot 55%
Anarchy Online 55%
Players spend considerably less time in their second virtual world
than they do in their first. Why is this?
Well, the first virtual world that someone gets into is very special
to them. It's a magical, enchanting, never-to-be-repeated
experience. You thought it was only you who looked back wistfully on
your early days like that? Nah, it's everyone.
This has consequences. There used to be a virtual world called
NeverWinter Nights, unrelated to the BioWare RPG, on AOL. When it
was closed down, its refugees descended on Meridian 59. They
immediately wanted M59 to incorporate every piece of NWN
functionality that they could remember.
In general, players view all their subsequent virtual worlds in the
light cast from their first one. They will demand that features from
their first world be added to their current world, even if those
very features were partly responsible for why they left the first
world. They'll say they hate treadmills, but if their first
experience was in a virtual world with treadmills, then they'll
gravitate towards other virtual worlds with treadmills, all the
while still hating them.
There's a long explanation for this, to do with the search for
identity, which I won't delve into here because you only need to
know that players do behave this way, not why (that's a different
rant). Read my book (Designing Virtual Worlds) if you want the full
story.
Point #3: Players judge all virtual worlds as a reflection of the
one they first got into.
Short-Termism
No quote this time.
When a virtual world changes (as it must), all but its most
experienced players will consider the change on its short-term
merits only. They look at how the change affects them, personally,
right now. They will only make mention of possible long-term effects
to help buttress a short-termist argument. They don't care that
things will be majorly better for them later if things are minorly
worse for them today - it's only the now that matters.
Why is this? I've no idea. Well, I do have an idea, but not one I
can back up, so I'll keep quiet about it. The fact is, players do
behave like this all the time, and it would only take a cursory scan
of any forum after patch day for you to convince yourself, if you
don't believe me.
This short-termist attitude has two outcomes. Firstly, something
short-term good but long-term bad is hard for developers to remove,
because players are mainly in favor of it. Secondly, something
short-term bad but long-term good is hard to keep because players
are mainly not in favor of it.
Design that is short-term good but long-term bad I call
"poor". Virtual worlds are primarily a mixture of good and poor
design, because the other two possibilities (outright bad and
short-term bad, long-term good) either aren't implemented or are
swiftly removed. Good design keeps players; poor design drives them
away (when the short term becomes the long term and the game becomes
unfun).
Point #4: Many players will think some poor design choices are good.
Summary
OK, so we now have the four points I need to launch into my
tirade. These are:
Point #1: Virtual worlds live or die by their ability to attract
newbies
Point #2: Newbies won't play a virtual world that has a major
feature they don't like.
Point #3: Players judge all virtual worlds as a reflection of the
one they first got into.
Point #4: Many players will think some poor design choices are
good.
I can now construct a line of reasoning that supports my initial
assertion.
The Newbie Induction
Under point #4, players will eventually quit a virtual world that
has poor features. Under point #3, however, they won't necessarily
recognize that a feature which caused them to leave was indeed
poor. Under point #2, they won't play those virtual worlds that lack
this feature. Under point #1, those virtual worlds that do lack the
feature - that is, those with the better design - will die through
dearth of newbies. Any absolute newbies, for whom this is their
first virtual world, will be educated to believe that this is how
things are meant to be, thus starting the whole cycle again. Q.E.D.
The normal rules of evolution by which computer games operate
propagate good design genes from one to the next. Each generation of
game takes the best mutations from the previous generation and adds
to them.
Virtual worlds also propagate good genes, but they propagate poor
ones more readily. The best virtual worlds don't pass their design
genes around much because of their high retention rate: "Why would I
quit when what I want is right here?". Poor design genes cause
players to leave sooner, so it's these features that wind up being
must-haves for the next generation of products. This leads to a
bizarre situation: for a new virtual world to succeed, it has to
have the same features that caused its antecedents to fail..!
You're not convinced, huh? OK, here are two of examples of the
theory in action, one old and one new.
Example 1 (Old): Permanent Death
If characters that died stayed dead, it would open up all kinds of
very convenient doors for virtual world design:
- It prevents early-adopter players from gaining an iron grip on
positions of power.
- It re-uses content effectively, because players view same-level
encounters from different angles using different characters.
- It's the default fiction for real life.
- It promotes role-play, because players aren't stuck with the
same, tired old character the whole time.
- It validates players' sense of achievement, because a high-level
character means a high-level player is behind it.
Many designers and experienced players would love to see a form of
PD in their virtual world, but it's not going to happen. Newbies
wouldn't play such a game (under points #2, #3 and #4), therefore
eventually neither would anyone else (point #1).
PD is short-term bad, long-term good: rejected.
Example 2 (new): Instancing
Instancing looks very appealing on the face of it: groups of friends
can play together without interference in relative
tranquillity. What's not to love?
The thing is, this is not what virtual worlds are about. How can you
have any impact on a world if you're only using it as a portal to a
first-person shooter? How do you interact with people if they're
battened down in an inaccessible pocket universe? Where's the sense
of achievement, of making a difference, of being someone?
Most players don't see it that way, though.
Newbies see it as familiar - "fantasy Counterstrike, cool!" (point
#2). They don't know what it means for their long-term enjoyment
(point #4). Of course, they eventually will learn what it means -
boredom and disenchantment - but even so, they probably won't
connect the effect with the cause. They'll just go looking for
another virtual world that features instancing (point #3). Older-era
players will perhaps initially avoid anything with instancing
because their first love didn't have it (point #3), but they'll
probably try it eventually because (point #4) hey, maybe it's that
missing piece that will give them the sense of closure they crave?
Thus, instancing will get locked into the paradigm. New virtual
worlds that don't have it will get fewer players than those that do
have it, even though they have the better design.
Instancing is short-term good, long-term bad: accepted.
Analysis
It's not just permanent death, it's not just instancing: it's
teleportation, it's banks, it's non-drop objects - it's everything
that makes sense in some contexts but not in all (or even most)
contexts.
Player: You don't have teleporting! How can I rejoin my group if I
miss a session?
Designer: Well gee, maybe by omitting teleportation I'm kinda
dropping a hint that you can have a meaningful gaming experience,
without always having to group with the same people of the same
level and run a treadmill the whole time?
Player: Are you NUTS? I want to play with my friends, and I want
to play with them RIGHT NOW!
Designer: But how are you ever going to make new friends? How -
Player: Are you listening? RIGHT NOW!
Designer: (Sigh)
Virtual worlds are becoming diluted by poor design decisions that
can't be undone. We're getting de-evolution - our future is in
effect being drawn up by newbies who (being newbies) are
clueless. Regular computer games don't have this problem.
The market for regular computer games is driven by the hardcore. The
hardcore finishes product faster than newbies, and therefore buys
new product faster than newbies. The hardcore understands design
implications better than newbies. They won't buy a game with
features they can see are poor; they select games with good design
genes. Because of this, games which are good are rewarded by higher
sales than games which are bad.
In virtual worlds, the hardcore either wanders from one to the next,
trying to recapture the experience of their first experience or they
never left in the first place. Furthermore, in today's flat-fee
universe, the hardcore spends the same amount of money as everyone
else: developers aren't rewarded for appealing to the cognoscenti,
except maybe through word of mouth that always comes with caveats
(because of point #3).
Possible solutions
I'm not completely pessimistic here; there are ways the cycle can be
broken, mainly by attacking points #2 and #3 (that is, by overcoming
prejudices concerning what "should" be in a virtual world). Here are
half a dozen hopes for the future:
- Innovation. If evolution doesn't work, maybe revolution will? A
virtual world different enough that it doesn't map onto players'
existing experiences may attract newbies and oldbies alike. Of
course, there's no guarantee that the new paradigm won't itself be
short-term good, long-term bad\u2026
- Marketing. People can sometimes be persuaded to overcome their
preconceptions. Even a text-based virtual world could become a
monster hit if it had the right licence and was advertised to the
right group of people. Unfortunately, marketing costs money.
- Cross-fertilization. If no poor features are ever added, point
#4 becomes redundant. How do you know that a proposed feature is
genuinely good, though? Simple - there are two traditions of
virtual worlds (West and East) so you cherry-pick the best ideas
from the other one. You speak Korean, right?
- Works of art. Virtual world design involves much craft, but at
root it's art. A designer makes decisions based on how they feel
things ought to be. Players will eventually pick up on the
differences and play a new virtual world just because they like
the designer's previous work: Raph Koster, Brad McQuaid and
Richard Garriott already have more creative freedom than
first-time designers. Point #3 evaporates! If only designing a
virtual world didn't take so long\u2026
- Time may heal. If you wait long enough that people forget why
they ever objected to something, that something can come
back. Fashions change, and who knows what the newbies of 2024 will
think? Good ideas will always get a second chance to enter the
paradigm, it's just that "wait a quarter of your life for it to
happen" thing that's a little depressing.
- Growing maturity. Perhaps the best hope for the future is the
growing maturity of the player base. First-time newbies will
always assert the supremacy of their first virtual world, but
oldbies who have been through the mill enough will realise that
some of the features they've been taking for granted are actually
counter-productive. If they're around in sufficient numbers, we
may see virtual worlds appearing that do everything right and very
little wrong, removing point #4 and leading us into a golden
age. I can dream\u2026
Conclusion
Virtual worlds are under evolutionary pressure to promote design
features that, while not exactly bad, are nevertheless poor. Each
succeeding generation absorbs these into the virtual world paradigm,
and introduces new poor features for the next generation to take on
board. The result is that virtual world design follows a downward
path of not-quite-good-enough, leading ultimately to an erosion of
what virtual worlds are.
Fortunately, there are a number of processes at work that have the
potential to arrest this descent. Thus, although the future of
virtual worlds may look disappointing, it's not completely bleak.
Besides, for the purist there will always be text MUDs.
[Author's second note: A non-Soapbox version of this hypothesis will
be presented at the Other Players conference in Copenhagen, Denmark,
later this year. Academics should refer to that, not to this.]
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