logging in or signing up casinos2 Rina Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 43 Category: Education License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: March 19, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Slide1: What Vegas Can Teach MMO Designers (and how to take a design lesson from almost anywhere) Damion Schubert Lead Designer, Wolfpack Studios http://www.zenofdesign.com ACC Computer Games Seminar 2 Nov 2005An Observation: An Observation Designers going to the next level dissect everything else. Good designers dissect games.Examples: Examples “A Pattern Language” Russian Space Program “Understanding Comics” Raph Koster Will Wright Stanford Prison Experiment “The Tipping Point” Language LearningSo….: So…. Where should a designer of virtual world look for inspiration? Other social spaces.All Social Spaces Are Designed: All Social Spaces Are Designed Amusement Parks and Zoos Locations of gift shops Supermarkets Impulse purchases on endcaps. Eye level item placement Bakeries near entrances Bars ‘Ladies night’Why Look At Casinos?: Why Look At Casinos? They are the original massively multiplayer gaming spaces – social spaces that contain minigames. They, too, are a service-oriented business demanding customer satisfaction for repeat business. Have you PLAYED a slot machine? It’s a grind. Don’t lose sight of differences: they want all your money now, whereas we focus on retention.Casinos in a Nutshell: Casinos in a Nutshell A myth: They do not, in fact, pipe oxygen into the air to make you gamble more. Designed with spectacle in mind. Bigger is better. Subtle things: no clocks, floors tilt towards casinos, hard to find exits, busy floors and boring ceilings. Tried to be family-oriented, now focused on being an adult Disneyland.Some ObservationsOn The Casino Experience: Some Observations On The Casino ExperienceBasic Casino Layout: Basic Casino Layout The MGM Grand is an exceedingly well-designed casino. The show theatres are all well inside the facility – you can’t get to them without walking by gaming tables. By comparison, MMO world designers frequently send people to the middle of nowhere, and offer nothing but a long dull walk back. Think about flow, and if the journey is to be its own reward, ensure the journey is rewarding.AddressingCheaters: Addressing Cheaters In Bringing Down the House, blackjack cheaters from MIT get caught and banned from casinos for life. They are assaulted in a casino restroom in the Bahamas – a casino they’ve never visited before. Casinos freely share the data of suspected cheaters. Tell that to your boss the next time he doesn’t want to ban a known cheater.Losing Time: Losing Time Vegas tries to create a sense of timelessness in their casinos, hoping you’ll get lost within. There are no clocks anywhere to be seen, and no windows you can see from the casino floor. This is a place where we are too much like Vegas. With new regulations in China, MMOs will actually begin moving in the opposite direction.Sense of Safety: Sense of Safety Despite their slogan, Vegas puts a premium in creating a very safe and secure atmosphere. The places feel ‘a little bit dangerous’, but in fact are an adult Disneyland. MMOs would be well advised to pursue the same sense of safety in their social atmosphere. This atmosphere helps Vegas attracts a large female demographic.Automated Events: Automated Events Treasure Island and Rio use automated events to draw customers to their casinos. Treasure Island’s also have the benefit of being visible from the street. While lacking the star power of a hit concert, they are still must-see items for many, and can be seen 365 days of the year. Apparently, loving events isn’t limited to MMOs. Casinos have found out how to do them more cost efficiently.Metrics: Metrics Harrah’s won the Insight Alignment award for their IT and data mining practices. More importantly, those practices turned the company into a major player. They datamined ‘Total Rewards’ members to validate market assumptions, identify (and predict!) valued customers and even guide slot machine placement. Don’t just use metrics for failure detection – use it to guide your design and your marketing. “[Our datamining program earned a] 50% annual return-on-investment… This is one of the best investments that we have ever made as a corporation.” -- John Boushy, CIO of Harrah'sFreebies: Freebies Harrah’s discovered that 26 percent of customers produced 82 percent of the revenues. They started rewarding these customers with free hotel and show tickets, and reaped huge rewards. Although our definition of ‘best customers’ may be different, the importance of coddling them isn’t.Maverick Design: Maverick DesignIntroducing Bill Friedman: Introducing Bill Friedman Bill Friedman was a highly regarded casino manager in Las Vegas, and literally wrote the book on hotel management. He quit to become an interior designer. Introducing Bill Friedman: Introducing Bill Friedman “In Las Vegas, where 87 percent of tourists gamble an average of four hours a day, not one of the megaresorts on the famous Las Vegas Strip has managed to lure even 10 percent of its visitors to gamble in its casino areas, and some megaresorts proportion of players to visitors is even worse, as low as 2 to 3 percent.” -- Friedman Friedman sought to find out why.Bill Friedman: Bill Friedman Friedman’s research found that players chose not to play in casinos that were too sparse – that felt empty or where players were too far apart. This flies in the face of 50 years of megacasino design. Friedman proceeded to compare the interior designs of crowded casinos with the less crowded megacasinos.The Aladdin: The Aladdin The Aladdin boasts the highest ceilings on the strip and has poorly defined sight lines. Friedman calls it the ‘barn effect’, and claims his metrics prove that players reject these grandiose spaces for casinos with a ‘less is more’ interior. Friedman cites the Aladdin in Vegas as one example. The casino cost $1.4 billion to build and frequently sits empty.Bill Friedman: Bill Friedman When gambling, players prefer smaller alcoves, lower ceilings and an overall cozier experience. Players like to gawk at megacasinos, but Friedman stresses it’s important to differentiate between getting onlookers and capturing gamblers. One observer said, “If Friedman's arguments are right, then modern conventional casino design standards are akin to what 18th century doctors prescribed for many of their patients: bleeding for the purpose of ridding the body of 'bad blood.’”Cozy Casinos: Cozy Casinos Friedman feels that casinos need to be cozier, so that they can reach a social critical mass. Slot machines are boring. Being around other people makes them interesting.Designing Cozy Worlds: Designing Cozy Worlds That applies to MMOs as well. We want ‘cozy worlds’. And finally offers a compelling explanation why some players love MMOs but hate grouping with others. We want our online spaces to hit critical mass. Constant human contact and patter. Desolation is our enemy.But We Don’t Get It: But We Don’t Get It “[The game] consists of a large 3,800 square kilometers of land. Considering the size of the land they have built in a portal system for faster travel from one area of the map to another.” “A medieval world of 15 000-square-mile of land (not including seas) [with a] strong emphasis on immersion thanks to a horizon view up to a distance of 30 miles away.” - Preview for an upcoming MMO - FAQ for a different upcoming MMONeither Do The Fans: Neither Do The FansCozy Worlds and Instancing: Cozy Worlds and Instancing Patter is crucial to maintaining interest in an online space. Need for patter means that instancing can be overdone. If your instancing solution still ensures there is patter and the world feels cozy, instancing will work fine. Best at high levels (when guild chat offers patter) or large raid situations. Instancing isn’t necessarily bad, but misused, it can destroy your cozy world.Conclusions: Conclusions Maverick designers can sometimes often the greatest inspiration. Use metrics to guide design, not just fix problems. Build cozy worlds. There are design inspirations everywhere – MMO designers should look first to social spaces. Embrace the notion that the interesting part of your virtual world is the people playing it. Reward your most valued players. Understand the value of quick expellation of cheaters. Think about your player’s flow through your game space. Consider automated events. Questions?: Questions? You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
casinos2 Rina Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 43 Category: Education License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: March 19, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Slide1: What Vegas Can Teach MMO Designers (and how to take a design lesson from almost anywhere) Damion Schubert Lead Designer, Wolfpack Studios http://www.zenofdesign.com ACC Computer Games Seminar 2 Nov 2005An Observation: An Observation Designers going to the next level dissect everything else. Good designers dissect games.Examples: Examples “A Pattern Language” Russian Space Program “Understanding Comics” Raph Koster Will Wright Stanford Prison Experiment “The Tipping Point” Language LearningSo….: So…. Where should a designer of virtual world look for inspiration? Other social spaces.All Social Spaces Are Designed: All Social Spaces Are Designed Amusement Parks and Zoos Locations of gift shops Supermarkets Impulse purchases on endcaps. Eye level item placement Bakeries near entrances Bars ‘Ladies night’Why Look At Casinos?: Why Look At Casinos? They are the original massively multiplayer gaming spaces – social spaces that contain minigames. They, too, are a service-oriented business demanding customer satisfaction for repeat business. Have you PLAYED a slot machine? It’s a grind. Don’t lose sight of differences: they want all your money now, whereas we focus on retention.Casinos in a Nutshell: Casinos in a Nutshell A myth: They do not, in fact, pipe oxygen into the air to make you gamble more. Designed with spectacle in mind. Bigger is better. Subtle things: no clocks, floors tilt towards casinos, hard to find exits, busy floors and boring ceilings. Tried to be family-oriented, now focused on being an adult Disneyland.Some ObservationsOn The Casino Experience: Some Observations On The Casino ExperienceBasic Casino Layout: Basic Casino Layout The MGM Grand is an exceedingly well-designed casino. The show theatres are all well inside the facility – you can’t get to them without walking by gaming tables. By comparison, MMO world designers frequently send people to the middle of nowhere, and offer nothing but a long dull walk back. Think about flow, and if the journey is to be its own reward, ensure the journey is rewarding.AddressingCheaters: Addressing Cheaters In Bringing Down the House, blackjack cheaters from MIT get caught and banned from casinos for life. They are assaulted in a casino restroom in the Bahamas – a casino they’ve never visited before. Casinos freely share the data of suspected cheaters. Tell that to your boss the next time he doesn’t want to ban a known cheater.Losing Time: Losing Time Vegas tries to create a sense of timelessness in their casinos, hoping you’ll get lost within. There are no clocks anywhere to be seen, and no windows you can see from the casino floor. This is a place where we are too much like Vegas. With new regulations in China, MMOs will actually begin moving in the opposite direction.Sense of Safety: Sense of Safety Despite their slogan, Vegas puts a premium in creating a very safe and secure atmosphere. The places feel ‘a little bit dangerous’, but in fact are an adult Disneyland. MMOs would be well advised to pursue the same sense of safety in their social atmosphere. This atmosphere helps Vegas attracts a large female demographic.Automated Events: Automated Events Treasure Island and Rio use automated events to draw customers to their casinos. Treasure Island’s also have the benefit of being visible from the street. While lacking the star power of a hit concert, they are still must-see items for many, and can be seen 365 days of the year. Apparently, loving events isn’t limited to MMOs. Casinos have found out how to do them more cost efficiently.Metrics: Metrics Harrah’s won the Insight Alignment award for their IT and data mining practices. More importantly, those practices turned the company into a major player. They datamined ‘Total Rewards’ members to validate market assumptions, identify (and predict!) valued customers and even guide slot machine placement. Don’t just use metrics for failure detection – use it to guide your design and your marketing. “[Our datamining program earned a] 50% annual return-on-investment… This is one of the best investments that we have ever made as a corporation.” -- John Boushy, CIO of Harrah'sFreebies: Freebies Harrah’s discovered that 26 percent of customers produced 82 percent of the revenues. They started rewarding these customers with free hotel and show tickets, and reaped huge rewards. Although our definition of ‘best customers’ may be different, the importance of coddling them isn’t.Maverick Design: Maverick DesignIntroducing Bill Friedman: Introducing Bill Friedman Bill Friedman was a highly regarded casino manager in Las Vegas, and literally wrote the book on hotel management. He quit to become an interior designer. Introducing Bill Friedman: Introducing Bill Friedman “In Las Vegas, where 87 percent of tourists gamble an average of four hours a day, not one of the megaresorts on the famous Las Vegas Strip has managed to lure even 10 percent of its visitors to gamble in its casino areas, and some megaresorts proportion of players to visitors is even worse, as low as 2 to 3 percent.” -- Friedman Friedman sought to find out why.Bill Friedman: Bill Friedman Friedman’s research found that players chose not to play in casinos that were too sparse – that felt empty or where players were too far apart. This flies in the face of 50 years of megacasino design. Friedman proceeded to compare the interior designs of crowded casinos with the less crowded megacasinos.The Aladdin: The Aladdin The Aladdin boasts the highest ceilings on the strip and has poorly defined sight lines. Friedman calls it the ‘barn effect’, and claims his metrics prove that players reject these grandiose spaces for casinos with a ‘less is more’ interior. Friedman cites the Aladdin in Vegas as one example. The casino cost $1.4 billion to build and frequently sits empty.Bill Friedman: Bill Friedman When gambling, players prefer smaller alcoves, lower ceilings and an overall cozier experience. Players like to gawk at megacasinos, but Friedman stresses it’s important to differentiate between getting onlookers and capturing gamblers. One observer said, “If Friedman's arguments are right, then modern conventional casino design standards are akin to what 18th century doctors prescribed for many of their patients: bleeding for the purpose of ridding the body of 'bad blood.’”Cozy Casinos: Cozy Casinos Friedman feels that casinos need to be cozier, so that they can reach a social critical mass. Slot machines are boring. Being around other people makes them interesting.Designing Cozy Worlds: Designing Cozy Worlds That applies to MMOs as well. We want ‘cozy worlds’. And finally offers a compelling explanation why some players love MMOs but hate grouping with others. We want our online spaces to hit critical mass. Constant human contact and patter. Desolation is our enemy.But We Don’t Get It: But We Don’t Get It “[The game] consists of a large 3,800 square kilometers of land. Considering the size of the land they have built in a portal system for faster travel from one area of the map to another.” “A medieval world of 15 000-square-mile of land (not including seas) [with a] strong emphasis on immersion thanks to a horizon view up to a distance of 30 miles away.” - Preview for an upcoming MMO - FAQ for a different upcoming MMONeither Do The Fans: Neither Do The FansCozy Worlds and Instancing: Cozy Worlds and Instancing Patter is crucial to maintaining interest in an online space. Need for patter means that instancing can be overdone. If your instancing solution still ensures there is patter and the world feels cozy, instancing will work fine. Best at high levels (when guild chat offers patter) or large raid situations. Instancing isn’t necessarily bad, but misused, it can destroy your cozy world.Conclusions: Conclusions Maverick designers can sometimes often the greatest inspiration. Use metrics to guide design, not just fix problems. Build cozy worlds. There are design inspirations everywhere – MMO designers should look first to social spaces. Embrace the notion that the interesting part of your virtual world is the people playing it. Reward your most valued players. Understand the value of quick expellation of cheaters. Think about your player’s flow through your game space. Consider automated events. Questions?: Questions?