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All Work And No Play: What You can Learn from Game Design 

 

 
 
Tags:  turbotax  game design  user experience  ux  web 
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Published:  November 15, 2011
 
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Slide 1: All Work and No Play What You can Learn from Game Design an IxDA Workshop 26 November 2009 Phil Ohme & Eric Pan Intuit - San Diego, California, USA
Slide 2: start times 2:00 I.   Introduction and Principles #4 - #9 (45 min) 2:45 II.  Principle #1: Personalization (30 min) 3:15 III. Principle #2: Progressive Disclosure (30 min) 3:45 IV. Break for coffee (15 min) V.  Principle #3: Balance Reward & Challenge(45 min) 4:00 4:45 VI. Exercise: Application to software (30 min) VII.Present teams' applications and conclude (45 min) 5:15   Note: Each Principle will involve teach/lecture, gameplay to discover examples, group discussion Agenda
Slide 3: Introduction Overview What the heck do Eric & Phil know about games? Group Poll Why are games important to look at? Expectations - what do you want to get out of this? Examples of how games have influenced the design of “regular” software Other minor principles outside the big 3
Slide 4: What the heck do they know about games?
Slide 5: Who likes to have fun?
Slide 6: Who likes to play games?
Slide 7: Why games are important to look at Everyone intuitively knows how to play Powerful and instinctive expectations for games: easy to understand engaging Engage players in what their goals are with feedback instantly (short first step) and continuous Failure is not painful, but fun What would all product experiences standard look like if we held it to the standard of games?
Slide 8: Expectations What do you want to get out of this workshop?
Slide 13: Interesting UIs, Interactions/Experience Interface is disappearing Moving towards cinematic, doesn't feel like playing a game.  Game example: EA Fight Night What did you see?
Slide 14: Principles #4 - #9 We will quickly look at these minor examples as a warm-up to the big 3 principles of game design Small Superfluous Flairs Exploration Encouragement The Open-Source Factor  Interpersonal & Adaptive Play  Functional, Interactive Sneak Peek (Salting/Priming) Help
Slide 15: Flair
Slide 16: Principle 4: Small Superfluous Flairs tiniest flair can be a delighter totally not necessary but makes it more fun little "useless" things that could be done boring & regular. Examples:   Wii News  how fun can you make news, right?   animations when you change font size stacks for news moving around as you zoom in and out of the global view cat tips while loading
Slide 17: Principle 4: Small Superfluous Flairs MINI Cooper Convertible's new "Openometer"  Measures how much time you clock with the top down Has real business value: If the owners will get more satisfaction and be happier with their top down, this can remind and encourage them to overcome the laziness and put it down. Then they will spend more time happy – increased satisfaction and net promoter! $$$$
Slide 18: Principle 5: Exploration Encouragement Sandbox concept Save entire state, then play around, then reverse Multiple lives Strong undo system Any order you want to proceed (don't force linear unless it makes sense) Game examples: Grand Theft Auto Prince of Persia Sands of Time (reverse time ) The more you can get the user to explore, the greater confidence and skill. Unnecessary constriction is bad. Comfort to explore means confidence. Note the ways exploration can be encouraged.
Slide 19: Principle 6: The Open-Source Factor Technical decision to allow public Lets you do work once to create engine, but others can put different experiences on top of it. Teams modding can make adjustments to your original vision/engine that make it better, then you can accept that (and make your original better) Game examples: HalfLife (video) & CounterStrike (video ) Counter Strike Mod ( Article on game mods (link ) The Key is staying focused on the purpose of the game/software, not controlling hardware & software.
Slide 20: Principle 7: Interpersonal & Adaptive Play Many variations on rules (user interpretation, user contribution) Challenge changes when you progress Two ways of supporting adaptive: Rules are loose enough Motivation Game examples: Beer Pong Pictionary/Charades Counterstrike World of Warcraft (Leroy Jenkins clip) Software examples: Salesforce.com sells little tools you buy a la carte (joblets)
Slide 21: Principle 8: Functional Sneak Peek Functional, interactive preview before game even released for sale Allows for salting (priming) of target audience Free Trial that encourages (and makes easy) spreading viral WOM Game examples: iPhone Cube Runner (free, but different courses) Spore CreatureCreator Spore upload to YouTube Software examples: Shop Buy Use --> Shop/Use Buy   Freeware Trial Amazon's new Window Shopping site  Zappos.com and how they payoff loser call center agents
Slide 22: Principle 9: Help  How does Halo teach you how to play? Intrusive help?  Tips screens? Wii News Cat Actual help screens? Tough to get the right balance of fun help and annoying help Game: Halo intro (need volunteer) Wii Bowling - drop the ball App Examples: Microsoft Clippy (bad) Contextual/point of need (Flyovers/hover help) Apple "ShowMe" and fade in help How do the different types of help work? When are they appropriate?
Slide 23: In-Depth Principles
Slide 24: Principle #1: Personalization Tailoring remap of keys (inverted look) Customize UIs Game Examples: Avatars:  Fight Night, Mii App Examples:  iGoogle makes you more likely to read stuff you created vs. canned Yahoo front page content. Personalization can increase the depth at which the customer engages the product. Sometimes it's a nice to have, sometimes it's a necessity.
Slide 25: Principle #2: Progressive Disclosure/Discovery Game examples:  Wii Sports: Bowling Mario Cart  Compare to software: Mac OSX  Power vs. Simplicity. Show a few of most important options. Show advanced upon request. Novice vs. Advanced. Create environments that graduate novice users to expert - if they want to!
Slide 26: Principle #3: Balance Reward & Challenge Changing difficulty level dynamically based on your performance throughout game Satisfaction when overcoming challenge, so don't just make super easy (boredom in a game) Sense of accomplishment  Every person has a different patience target level, so adapt based on learning (or at least be aware) Do not reward gamers with significant or solely monetary rewards--"leaderboards" make status its own reward   Case Study: Betty Crocker cake mix
Slide 27: Principle #3: Balance Reward & Challenge (con't) example: Game WarioWare (everyone play to boss stage) Rubics Cube Software examples: TurboTax Live Community Microsoft Excel: learning formulas and shortcuts Piggybanks as a videogames
Slide 28: Games influence “regular” software Xero for Small Business Accounting online bank reconciliation UI resembles Tetris clearing rows is fun! Xero (a QuickBooks competitor from New Zealand, specifically their #2 bank reconciliation) Wasabe for personal finances Compares your spending at a particular merchant to other spenders across the country App Zapper for removing programs on a Mac Satisfying zapping
Slide 29: Exercise: Apply gaming principles to products 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Personalization Progressive Disclosure Balance Reward & Challenge Small Superfluous Flairs Exploration Encouragement The Open-Source Factor Interpersonal & Adaptive Play Functional, Interactive Sneak Peek (Salting/Priming) Help   Prizes: Prize for applying a principle most effectively Prize for applying a principle with the most novelty (go wild!)
Slide 30: Appendix: More resources Good Experience Games has hundreds of clever and unique UIs ready to try out, right now. Designing Interactions Book and DVD by Bill Moggridge.  Info on the topic of play & the design of interactive play in Chapter 5. Changing the Game: How Video Games Are Transforming the Future of Business by David Edery and Ethan Mollick.  Published by FT Press | Inc Magazine Review of Book The Work of Play article in the LA Times. The Art of Human-Computer Interface Design edited by Brenda Laurel, published by AddisonWesley in 1990. Beyond Usability:  Exploring Distributed Play article looks into how video game companies are getting into XD. What's in a game? A look at game design best practices as prime influencers of interaction design , an IxDA 2009 presentation by Nadya Direkova from Razorfish, San Francisco. "Gaming Design" tags at Kotaku, including news and new game design degrees. Check out PicasaWeb's Face tagging UI. "it's like a game that compels me to finish and process all the photos " Researching Video Games the UX Way (How they Researched Usability for Spore) in boxesandarrows. An interview with Spore designer Wil Wright, on forming cohesive teams, NY Times.   Mint makes personal finance a game. April 2009 on TechCrunch and Lifehacker. Research on Gaming, including biometric and eyetracker data, Aug 2009 90%ofEverything.com   Go to college for Game Design. RPI in NYstate is hiring 3 faculty members for its Games and Simulation Arts and Science (GSAS) degree program.  August 2009 Games = Fun so why not take mundane or boring experiences and make them fun? Thats what TheFunTheory.com did:  Get people to take the stairs (instead of escalator), pick up more garbage. The Fitness Challenge makes losing weight into a game. Board game and mobile aspects.
Slide 31: phil_ohme@intuit.com eric_pan@intuit.com philohme@gmail.com ericpan@gmail.com

   
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