brainstorming and conceptualization the game

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Brainstorming and Conceptualization The Game Mohammad Zikky, M.T

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Brainstorming and Conceptualization The Game. Mohammad Zikky, M.T. Your Game Idea. It is a mistake to copy current game Or to create hybrid …but critique as you play games Mechanics come first Don’t be distracted by dramatic elements. Why Flappy Bird Flaps ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Brainstorming and Conceptualization

The GameMohammad Zikky, M.T

Page 2: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Your Game Idea It is a mistake to copy current game

• Or to create hybrid …but critique as you play games Mechanics come first

• Don’t be distracted by dramatic elements

Page 3: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Why Flappy Bird Flaps ?

Is it Mario Bross Plagiarism?

Page 4: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Brainstorming Techniques Inspiration Game List (by genre/platform) Idea exploration (jot list as things pop into your head) Categories / subcategories (taxonomy of ideas) Idea Tree List (everything about one topic) Idea Cards Shout it out (into a voice recorder) Stream of Consciousness (try to write as fast as you can

think) Randomize (dictionary or magazine lookup and then write

about topic you find) Research (research a topic in detail) Put it on the wall (white board) Extreme Measures (try something you wouldn’t normally

do)

Page 5: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationWhere do ideas come from?

Great ideas come from everywhere.

They spring up day or night, while sleeping, driving, or watching TV.

Ideas are impossible to predict.

If you are not paying attention, they will slip right past you.

Page 6: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationWhere do ideas come from?

Carry a notepad and pen with you at all times.

Write down your ideas from a burst of inspiration to slow trickles that seep into your mind.

Creative people often have ideas while driving.

Ideas are ephemeral (come just a second) and will vanish before they are fully formed.

Page 7: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationWhere do ideas come from?

If you want to be a game designer, you must think of yourself as an Olympic contender in the sport of idea brainstorming.

Page 8: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationWhere do ideas come from?

Generating good ideas is hard work and requires dedication.

If you get into the habit of write down all of your ideas, your problem will be noted well, although you don’t have time to develop all of them.

Page 9: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationWhere do ideas come from?

Learn to use a database program to create an IDEABASE.

Create categories for premise, plot, character, etc.

When you need to use an idea, you can sort quickly by heading.

Page 10: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationWhere do ideas come from?

Forcing yourself to record and organize your ideas will accomplish two things:

1. It cements the ideas in your memory for later retrieval.

2. It gives you a chance to discard the lousy ideas.

This is the first step in editing

Page 11: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Structured brainstorming is a powerful skill.

It takes practice to become good. You might be a brainstorming

beginner of a brainstorming expert. Brainstormers train themselves how

to generate workable ideas and solutions to problems.

Page 12: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Another brainstorming process is to create an Idea Tree.

Start with 5 trees trunks – well spaced apart.

Name each tree something you love.

Write down 2 ideas (branches) for each tree

Continue the process to develop each tree.

Page 13: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Example idea of GameGame Reog Ponorogo

Page 14: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Idea Tree Exploration

Page 15: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

List Creation: List everything you can dream up on a certain topic.

Idea Cards: Take a deck of index cards and write a single idea on each one. Now, pair the cards. For example, pair Dinosaur with Drag Racing. Your next game could be about dinosaurs racing prehistoric cars.

Page 16: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Stream of Consciousness: Sit down at the computer and start writing like crazy. Don’t worry about being coherent. Don’t think about punctuation or spelling. After 10 minutes describe words on a particular topic, read over what you have done.

Page 17: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Randomize It: Take out a dictionary and open it up to any page, then start with the word you see first. A newspaper or magazine also works. Now start writing down ideas related to that word. The word you find might be microwave and you have an idea about a future on Earth where microwaves are used to levitate people.

Page 18: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Research: If you have a basic idea, try researching the topic. Find out all you can about the topic. Maybe the idea of ants fascinates you. Learn about ant hills, how ants live and work, what ants eat, what are army ants. You could design a board or digital game around the name Ant Colony or Ants In Your Pants.

Page 19: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Extreme Measures: Put yourself into new situations. Force yourself to try something entirely different, whitewater rafting, snorkeling, a new sport or even a new hobby. The next thing you know, you are designing an underwater game where players are snorkeling and coming into contact with fish, stupid sponges, evil jellyfish, and a wise old turtle.

Page 20: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Team Brainstorming: Working with others is both stimulating and highly productive. Two or more people can bounce ideas back and forth. Two minds can build upon the core idea in ways that a single mind cannot. Hearing your ideas being discussed by someone else helps you take a perspective look at your concepts.

Page 21: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationBrainstorming Techniques

Rules of Team Brainstorming:1. State a purpose.2. No idea is bad! Never criticize ideas.3. Encourage differing views.4. Vary the structure – don’t rely on just

one method of brainstorming.5. Go for lots of ideas – try for 100 ideas

per hour.

Page 22: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationEditing & Refining

Now change gears and put on your critical hat.

Schedule your editing sessions on different days from your brainstorming sessions.

Make it clear to everyone that brainstorming is over.

Pull out the ideas that work. Narrow down to the top 10 ideas.

Page 23: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationEditing & Refining

Nominal Group Technique: Now that you have your top 10 ideas, have each person put the list into rank order – assign a number value from one to 10.

Find the average rank score of each idea.

Rearrange your list using the new combined rank order.

Page 24: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

ConceptualizationEditing & Refining

Take you newly ranked list and narrow down to the top 3 ideas.

Discuss these ideas. You might even brainstorm each idea for game development feasibility.

Take a new group ranking. Repeat the processes until you have 1 idea that everyone agrees on and that can feasibility be used in a game.

Page 25: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Turning Your Idea Into A Game

If you are going to produce a truly original game, try to forget all of the other games – for a second.

Don’t combine existing games to create a better one.

Work from your vision of the type of game you’d like to play.

Page 26: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Turning Your Idea Into A Game Is your game about Africa? Does it have wild animals? How will the animals interact? Does the player have clearly defined

goals? What obstacles get in the way in

getting to the goals? The game mechanics stem from your

main idea.

Page 27: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Turning Your Idea Into A Game

What will be your game’s mechanics?

What do you want your game to look like?

How will your game function? Don’t lock in your ideas early in the

development process. Give yourself time to play around and experiment.

Page 28: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Elements of Game Design Players

• Number of players• Role of players• Player interaction patterns

Objectives Procedures Rules Resources Conflict

• Obstacles• Opponents• Dilemmas

Boundaries Outcome

Challenge Play Premise Character Story

Formal Elements: Dramatic Elements:

Page 29: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Questions to Ask Yourself What is the conflict in my game? What are the rules and procedures? What actions do players take and when? Are there turns? How do they work? How many players can play? How long does a game take to resolve? What is the working title? Who is the target audience?

Page 30: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Fleshing Out Game Structure Define each player’s goal. What does each player need to do to

win? What is the single most important

player action in the game? Describe how it functions.

Map out how a typical turn works. How do the players interact with

each other?

Page 31: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

CS 4455Fall 2006

EXERCISE Write down 5 things you like

• Branching off each. Two ideas related to that thing

Branching off each idea, 2 more ideas etc.• Do this again, but with a theme

Dark and scary, middle earth, robot-controlled dystopia etc.

Page 32: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Example My Idea Tree

Page 33: Brainstorming and Conceptualization The  Game

Example Dark & Scary Idea Tree