Goal: Difference between revisions
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What the player is supposed to be doing at any given time. | What the player is supposed to be doing at any given time.<br> | ||
<br> | |||
Goals are to interactive fiction what plot is to normal fiction: | Goals are to interactive fiction what plot is to normal fiction:<br> | ||
they provide something to motivate and hang events off. In the | they provide something to motivate and hang events off. In the earliest games, the goal was typically to acquire treasure and put it in a special place, usually suggested by text at that place. Other goals would be to accomplish a mission. For example, the first Scott Adams adventure, _Adventureland_, had as its goals to collect and deposit treasure items. The third, _Mission Impossible_, gave you a mission via tape recorder at the start of the game.<br> | ||
earliest games, the goal was typically to acquire treasure and | <br> | ||
put it in a special place, usually suggested by text at that | One important role of goals in interactive fiction is that they make the world seem more real. Any computer simulation is far less richly detailed than the real world. If a player is trying actions at random, or examining random things, most of these will fail in an unsatisfying way. If the player is following a goal, then the player actions are more focussed, and the author can concentrate on fleshing out the actions that serve the goal and the objects those actions require.<br> | ||
place. Other goals would be to accomplish a mission. For | <br> | ||
example, the first Scott Adams adventure, _Adventureland_, had | Goals can change during the game. In the Infocom game \\Lurking Horror\\, the player's goal initially is to get his or her homework done, but changes as the player finds out more about the situation. In this case, the initial goal will lead the player to a point at which he or she will stumble over a later goal (if the game is well constructed).<br> | ||
as its goals to collect and deposit treasure items. The third, | <br> | ||
_Mission Impossible_, gave you a mission via tape recorder at | Goals can be specified in different ways. They can be set out explicitly (the tape recorder in \\Mission Impossible\\) or implicitly (the puzzling events in \\Lurking Horror\\ that obviously | ||
the start of the game. | need investigation). They are often clarified by means of rewards, such as points given for advancing toward the goal, or new areas to explore opening up. (Indeed, the achievement of a goal should be clearly recognized in the game, or it will feel anticlimactical.)<br> | ||
<br> | |||
One important role of goals in interactive fiction is that they make | -- lower-cased the "G" in the title to create consistency between all glossary titles-- [[Heather Evenson]] - 20 Nov 2002<br> | ||
the world seem more real. Any computer simulation is far less | <br> | ||
richly detailed than the real world. If a player is trying actions | |||
at random, or examining random things, most of these will fail in | |||
an unsatisfying way. If the player is following a goal, then the | |||
player actions are more focussed, and the author can concentrate | |||
on fleshing out the actions that serve the goal and the objects | |||
those actions require. | |||
Goals can change during the game. In the Infocom game | |||
done, but changes as the player finds out more about the situation. | |||
In this case, the initial goal will lead the player to a point at | |||
which he or she will stumble over a later goal (if the game is | |||
well constructed). | |||
Goals can be specified in different ways. They can be set out | |||
explicitly (the tape recorder in | |||
implicitly (the puzzling events in | |||
need investigation). They are often clarified by means of rewards, | |||
such as points given for advancing toward the goal, or new areas | |||
to explore opening up. (Indeed, the achievement of a goal should | |||
be clearly recognized in the game, or it will feel anticlimactical.) | |||
--lower-cased the "G" in the title to create consistency between all glossary titles-- [[Heather Evenson]] - 20 Nov 2002 | |||
[[DavidThornley]] - 09 Sep 2002 | [[DavidThornley]] - 09 Sep 2002 |
Revision as of 20:57, 29 December 2004
What the player is supposed to be doing at any given time.
Goals are to interactive fiction what plot is to normal fiction:
they provide something to motivate and hang events off. In the earliest games, the goal was typically to acquire treasure and put it in a special place, usually suggested by text at that place. Other goals would be to accomplish a mission. For example, the first Scott Adams adventure, _Adventureland_, had as its goals to collect and deposit treasure items. The third, _Mission Impossible_, gave you a mission via tape recorder at the start of the game.
One important role of goals in interactive fiction is that they make the world seem more real. Any computer simulation is far less richly detailed than the real world. If a player is trying actions at random, or examining random things, most of these will fail in an unsatisfying way. If the player is following a goal, then the player actions are more focussed, and the author can concentrate on fleshing out the actions that serve the goal and the objects those actions require.
Goals can change during the game. In the Infocom game \\Lurking Horror\\, the player's goal initially is to get his or her homework done, but changes as the player finds out more about the situation. In this case, the initial goal will lead the player to a point at which he or she will stumble over a later goal (if the game is well constructed).
Goals can be specified in different ways. They can be set out explicitly (the tape recorder in \\Mission Impossible\\) or implicitly (the puzzling events in \\Lurking Horror\\ that obviously
need investigation). They are often clarified by means of rewards, such as points given for advancing toward the goal, or new areas to explore opening up. (Indeed, the achievement of a goal should be clearly recognized in the game, or it will feel anticlimactical.)
-- lower-cased the "G" in the title to create consistency between all glossary titles-- Heather Evenson - 20 Nov 2002
DavidThornley - 09 Sep 2002