Difference between revisions of "Template:Player interaction"
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− | [[File:Dunheim Dungeon.mp4|thumb|450px|start=2|[[Alpha-0]] [[Dünir]] [[Dünheim]] [[Dungeons|dungeon]] design by [[Michael Bacon]].{{livestream|18 January 2018|16m34|mD1q3aTRcPY}}{{livestream|9 February 2018|4m42|w8eehrdIIXI}}{{video|24 February 2018|0m01s|HA-8RpPOcRU}}]] | + | [[File:Dunheim Dungeon.mp4|thumb|450px|start=2|end=999|[[Alpha-0]] [[Dünir]] [[Dünheim]] [[Dungeons|dungeon]] design by [[Michael Bacon]].{{livestream|18 January 2018|16m34|mD1q3aTRcPY}}{{livestream|9 February 2018|4m42|w8eehrdIIXI}}{{video|24 February 2018|0m01s|HA-8RpPOcRU}}]] |
Game systems and mechanics that foster player interaction. | Game systems and mechanics that foster player interaction. |
Revision as of 23:25, 14 May 2020
Game systems and mechanics that foster player interaction.
- Dungeons, Raids, Combat
- Guilds, Guild halls, Guild fortresses, Guild castles
- Group dynamics, Looting
- Affiliations
- Social organizations
- Parlor games
We decided to focus on mechanics that bring the idea of community to the forefront. To get people to interact with each other meaningfully – not just to conquer a raid boss, or to get some coin from a faceless auction house, but to maybe save a city. A city that all the local residents had a stake in. A city that the players had spent weeks or months developing; the defense of that city, the attack on that city! Or building a world together as a community choosing our own fate with our friends. We believe that’s going to be a story far more memorable and far more meaningful to players than just about anything we can come up with.[4]