Game Design Documents 1

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Game Design Documents 1

Design Documentation Stages Design treatment or concept paper Design summary/design documents Game feasibility Pitch document or proposal Design specification/product specification/production document Functional product specification 2

Game Treatment Game story Game play and look Abstract or “Reader’s Digest” type overview Focus on appearance Player roles and actions Strategies and motivations Development Specification Hardware Software Algorithm style 3

Sample Development Specification This game uses a new 3D engine Backgrounds are animated Roughly 50 scenes will be rendered using 3D Studio Will be developed for Windows Programmed using C , DirectX, and our in-house physics API Estimated development time 10-16 months 4

Design Document More formal and complete than game treatment What does the player do? What is the interface? What is the plot? Level Details What are the levels? Who are the characters? How do characters interact? 5

Design Document Content Game Overview Plotline detail More detailed revision of game treatment List player goals and achievements and work backwards Story outlines for each game section 6

Outlining Your Game Describe universal elements- common features to every part of the game scoring rules names special powers anything else? Details of every scene or game level Name for scene Resource details Physical and audio appearance 7

Outlining Your Game Details of every scene (continued). Background or playfield Foreground objects and characters Animations present for the scenes Music and sound effects Script for characters Scenes and transitions Flow charts for story branches Miscellaneous elements (credits, saving games, setup, etc. 8

Game Design Document Sections Table of Contents Introduction/Overview Game Mechanisms Artificial Intelligence Game Elements Story Overview Game Progression Bibliography 9

Product Specification Who is the production team? Target audience Gameplay Shelf-life? Production tools Schedule with milestones and deliverables 10

Game Specification What is it like to play the game? Interface mock-up Story-line summary Major: final accomplishments Minor: intermediate tasks Storyboards Prototype artwork and screen sequences 11

Game Specification Character bibles Flowcharting Profiles and biographies for each character What are the decision points and scene transitions? Scripts What happens in each scene and during each level? 12

Storyboarding Story outline Draw 6-12 scenes from game and assemble them like a comic strip Add some notes to each sketch describing the action, artwork, sounds 13

Detail Questions What can characters do (fly,jump,invisible)? How many enemies does hero fight? What weapons are available? How does the player get rejuvenated? Multi-player stuff? Game perspective (side, tops, 3D, first person)? What kind of sound track? What about main character’s personality? 14

Level Outline Name of section, level, or scene Physical or audio appearance Foreground objects and characters Actions? Animation? Sound effects? Character scripts Transitions 15

Puzzle Types - 1 Ordinary use of objects Unusual use of an ordinary object Creating new objects out of old? Information puzzles (e.g. find missing piece) Codes and word puzzles Excluded middle (relies on cause and effect type relationships) People puzzles (outwit the guard) Timing puzzles 16

Puzzle Types - 2 Sequence puzzles Logic puzzles (e.g. riddles) Trial and error Machinery puzzles Alternate interfaces Mazes 17

Bad Puzzles Unnecessary repetition Restore puzzle Arbitrary puzzles cause should be linked to effects instead of random Designer puzzles find answer to puzzle when you die only designer can solve the puzzle Binary puzzle (e.g. wrong answer death) Hunt the pixel Unnecessary interludes 18

Good Puzzles Solvable Being fair No down time Some randomness – different each time you played Naturalness to environment Amplify a theme Principle of least astonishment 19

Hints Bread crumbs – at first everything works well and then give less direct help, if user struggles give more help Proximity of puzzle to solution – a fair game gives users everything they need to know Alternate solutions Red herrings (things that “don’t compute”) Steering a player 20

Designing Puzzles Break story into scenes Puzzles are obstacles to moving between scenes Trick is to make the puzzles match the story and setting Keep your character’s abilities in mind Empathize with the player and what he or she will know when puzzle is encountered 21

Character Bible Journal in which the designer writes a profile and biography for characters used in the script Script may not be linear, so hypertext technology may need to be used to maintain continuity 22

Good Design Documents State the goals of the game explicitly Make the document itself readable Give priorities to ideas so that team members know what is important and what may be rejected List all details (e.g. behavioral model) Describe how you will do things 23

Why Use Prototypes? Minimize risk of starting over from scratch Involve client in development process early Prototypes can function as an animated storyboard 24

Prototypes Answer Questions What will the finished product look like? What do we need to do? Can we produce the product at all? Can we attract a publisher? 25

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Typical Game Sections 1. Game startup 2. 3. 4. Initialize variables Set up data structures Allocate memory Load graphics and sound files Game enters main loop or exits to OS User is prompted for input User input retrieve 27

Game Sections - 2 5. 6. 7. Game state updated based on user’s last input Based on last player action AI is applied, collisions processed, objects move Once player logic processing is complete, background animation performed, music, sound effects,and housekeeping performed 28

Game Sections - 3 Current animation frame is rendered (drawn to virtual buffer) Program displays frame by copying buffer to screen Frame display rate locked to 30 fps Exit section (game over) 8. 9. 10. 11. Release resources Restore system settings Exit to OS 29

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