Great talk! “Engineer a trend to conclusion.” Wise words indeed
@chadstilson8804 Жыл бұрын
I love the quote from Dieter Rams, an Amazing Industrial Designer (Braun) and who was Highly inspiring to Jony Ive (Apple), "Good Design is as little Design as Possible"... I feel it really lines up with Board Game Design as well.
@tomcox7068 Жыл бұрын
James' explanation of fun as system plus surprise is one of the most helpful and insightful ways ive heard that described. Thank you!
@AllNightGames2210 ай бұрын
Great episode. I appreciate all of the advice and insight!
@ferbogadoaSalirAJugarАй бұрын
i just listen all this conversation, thank you for sharing, valuable, precious and enrich our culture in game.
@ibjeepr Жыл бұрын
Understanding MTG well has made learning every other game easy. Everything boils down to core concepts that MTG forces you understand. Even poorly written rule sets become easier to fill in the gap for if you know how MTG works.
@spinningtrain909110 ай бұрын
so true, and the system is really robust as well. you can insert the stack into a lot of card games and they still work well.
@OtterChomp Жыл бұрын
Acidentally found this an hour after you posted it, I didn’t realize it was so new until I went to see if your book was out! ❤ It’s great! I can’t wait to buy your book
@ddobrien1 Жыл бұрын
I wanna be James Ernest when I grow up! (fyi, I'll be 50 years old soon)
@mcshiro19419 ай бұрын
Never give up the mechanics that everyone says are fun! I was working on a game that could basically play the exact same without this tiny tactical element I added to it but everyone says it’s so much fun to pick up the wooden component and stack it so there’s no reason for me to take it out because people enjoy picking up something that has some weight to it.
@VanBurleigh11 ай бұрын
i was hooked from the first minute. great talk thanks!
@bradwatson732410 ай бұрын
Imagine someone invents chess and then puts it out to play testers. Those testers will play poorly -- like all new chess players invariably do -- and they will have a meh experience. The chess inventor, based on those reactions, will give up on his/her game and a masterpiece won't make it to market.
@kerberosarmory9 ай бұрын
Great argument have to say,
@nib712869 ай бұрын
Could you define what "masterpiece" means to you?
@kerberosarmory9 ай бұрын
@nib71286 i think in this case, the term "masterpiece" is more relativistic than specific. it's more of a term describing the potential of a game rather than its setting or mechanics, like that there dosnt necessarily need to be a corelation/simularity between game mechanics or design but rather the capability of that game to develop diversity in relation to nuances of different pathway (game strategy) towards achieving a specific goal but still keeping a cohesion so not to make the actions only diverse in randomness
@nib712869 ай бұрын
@@kerberosarmory is a masterpiece necessarily perfect, or is it more about percieved respect?
@kerberosarmory9 ай бұрын
@nib71286 perceived respect definitely, by definition, a game can't be perfect
@flowwinter49329 ай бұрын
Great interview, thank you! Still Im not sure I agree with your take on game rules ("shorter is better"): If a game has good rules it is fun just to read through them. Long complex rule books can give you a warm experience, just like a good book. And some games have great rules, where reading the rules may even be more fun than playing the actual game.
@rileymcphee94297 ай бұрын
My biggest pet peeve is games that tell you they're emulating an experience, and then the game plays nothing like that experience. Example: A racing game where you're just managing resources the whole time.
@arcanineryu7 ай бұрын
Pfft. You'd love my game then. It's a card game about making a big Scooby-Doo style sandwich. And the game play is putting cards with sandwich ingredients on a stack to make a sandwich 🥪
@rileymcphee94297 ай бұрын
@@arcanineryu slamwich?
@arcanineryu7 ай бұрын
@@rileymcphee9429 I went with super sandwich stacker because the goal is to have the biggest sandwich. Slamwich would more imply being loud.
@micahneveu4633 Жыл бұрын
I've been practicing removing/combining rules and it has been REALLY good for the game. Way less design on certain aspects and removes a bit of clutter.
@spartan316kaos4 ай бұрын
From someone who sees a lot of fun being cut from video games because they are just chopping up other successful games to take a mixmashed hodgepodge of features and call it a game (while also cutting their creative staff to a skeleton crew) I'd love to show this clip to a board room and other c-level execs at a host of game development companies
@a7xfanben2 ай бұрын
Nice interview!
@1ばかぶた4 ай бұрын
agree, dont take advice at face value. you understand it more, so read what is under it
@arcanineryu7 ай бұрын
Im workin on a simple childrens card game based on building a big sandwich. And it sure was a pain trying to fit the games rules on a single 2.5 inch card.
@suntzu61225 ай бұрын
Sounds like it needs to be much simpler.
@suntzu61224 ай бұрын
How is your game coming? Making a sammich is a great theme
@arcanineryu4 ай бұрын
@@suntzu6122 well I finished the prototype, got it printed, and made a tutorial video for it just in time to attend a tabletop convention called origins game fair. Where I pitched the game to a lot of publishers. And now I'm waiting on responses if any of them are interested in the game.
@patch8376 Жыл бұрын
Great job!
@Winter4207 ай бұрын
Great video
@kevinhardy89977 ай бұрын
If there is a sense that you built your engine pretty good, but have a few ideas of what to do differently next time, you have a good game. If it is hopeless, the game will gather dust
@HansScharler Жыл бұрын
Spite Tokens!
@ericmorales86405 ай бұрын
good
@mitchellcole1299 Жыл бұрын
For the Algorithm
@micahklein76664 ай бұрын
Some good advice but the advice about just watching a Playtest and not asking questions.... AWFUL advice. Don't listen to that. Lol you should have notepad ready and ask atleast 2 questions every test. Only way to find the real golden nuggets of info.