Category Archives: Game Design

What Separates A Bad, Good, and Great Game Designer

Civilization game designer Sid MeierA poster on Quora, a question and answer website, posted the question “What separates a good, bad and great designer?”  It so happens that the night before I read this question, I had explained the role of a game designer with my Survey of the Video Game Industry class at the Los Angeles Film School, and so I ventured an answer, which I’m reposting on my blog.

 

A bad designer is one who can’t be bothered to:

  • Be creative
  • Strive for originality within the established constraints of the project
  • Look beyond their initial ideas
  • Be willing to give up ideas that don’t work, don’t fit, or are too costly

Good designers also realize that their initial ideas are very rarely the best ones, so they will keep an open mind and keep nothing sacred as they playtest their designs and evaluate the results.

As one meme I show to my students says about game design:

  • If you don’t make mistakes, you’re doing it wrong
  • If you don’t correct your mistakes, you’re doing it really wrong
  • If you can’t accept that you’re mistaken, you’re not doing it at all.

However, a great designer will be able to realize when their gameplay tweaks have reached a point of diminishing returns and be able to identify when a game is good enough to be released without going beyond the time, budget and scope constraints.

Good game designers realize they aren’t making games for their own enjoyment — they are making them for other players’ enjoyment.  They will start out specifying the experience they want their players to have and playtest the game with potential players to see if they having the experience that the designer wanted them to have.  However, a great designer will not only listen to the problems are, they will figure out why they are saying they are having problems and what the real source of the problems are.

While a good designer might be inspired by the themes and mechanics they’ve played before and combine genres in interesting ways, a great designer is able to draw upon non-electronic sources such as books, art, plays, museums, history, and current events.

The Extra Credits YouTube channel has a great video describing the skills required to be a decent game designer and a really great game designer.

 

 In summary, to be a decent game designer, you need to have these skills:
  • A high level of technical writing skill (spelling, writing, grammar)
  • A solid grounding in logic
  • Knowledge of basic psychology
  • Understanding the medium your are working in
  • A solid grasp of mathematics, at least through advanced algebra

 

To be a really good game designer, you need to have:

  • A thorough knowledge of literature, philosophy and myth.
  • An understanding of world religions
  • Basic scripting and programming ability
  • An understanding of art principles
  • An understanding of basic audio design and musical principles
  • A practical knowledge of graphic design
  • A thorough internal library of games to reference
  • A well-balanced life experience

Most importantly, you need to create games.  What really separates bad, good, and great game designers are quality of games they have in their portfolio.

 

 

Breaking Into The Game Industry As A Game Designer

I Want YouOne question I get asked all of the time, and it’s a question that I answer for my students even before they ask, is “how do I break into the industry as a game designer?”

I’ll provide a quick answer to that question with some general steps to follow. However, be advised that the game industry is very competitive, with far more people interested in breaking in than there are jobs available, so this is by no means a guarantee of success.

 

  • Create a game design portfolio (game design documents, pen and paper games, level designs and/or games made in Unity, GameMaker, Scratch, etc.). If you don’t know how to do any of this — read books, view online tutorials, attended classes and workshops.
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  • Play lots of games of many different types. Try to figure out what decisions the designers made in creating the rules and other game elements, why they made them, and what might you do differently.
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  • Start networking with people who work in games. Attend game conferences, job fairs, user groups, meet ups. Make sure you have business cards with a link to your portfolio site to hand out wherever you go.
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  • Once you’re ready for job hunting, scan Gamasutra, CreativeHeads.net, GameJobs.com, even Craig’s List for openings. Visit the Career Opportunities pages of game studio and publisher websites, and connect with game industry recruiters on LinkedIn. Go for any job opening you think you are qualified for. You probably won’t be able to get a game design position as your first job, so find any way to get your foot into the game industry’s door.