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Designer's
Notebook

What's On the Designer's Bookshelf?
I'm
unbelievably busy at the moment - catching a few days at home between
a teaching trip to Sweden and a teaching trip to Germany, and the
Game Developers' Conference looming just around the corner. This
is to say nothing of juggling various consulting clients. So I thought
this time I'd have a trawl through my bookshelves and talk a bit
about what I've found useful.
At
the top of my list is the excellent Gender-Inclusive Game Design:
Expanding the Market (Charles River Media, 2004) by Sheri Graner-Ray.
This book is thorough, well-researched, and very readable. It's
not a theoretical, academic tome, but aimed directly at the designer
and producer of consumer videogames. Graner-Ray has a long history
of making games for both sexes and she knows what she's talking
about. Wisely, she avoided writing about "how to make games
for girls," opting for inclusiveness rather than gender specificity.
The late-'90s games-for-girls movement was mostly a flop (see my
earlier column, "Games
for Girls? Eeeeewwww!"), as publishers jumped on the bandwagon
and turned out a bunch of low-tech games in pink boxes. They were
poor value for the money and didn't sell well. Graner-Ray has realized
that the key to success is making games that appeal to women
without necessarily being women-themed.
My
only complaint about Gender-Inclusive Game Design is that
it could be a bit longer, and spend more time presenting positive
examples from existing titles. But that's a very minor quibble.
For anyone who calls him- or herself a professional game designer,
this book is more than a must-read, it's a must-own.
"Those
who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," said
the philosopher George Santayana, and nowhere is this more true
than in game design. We have been developing computer games for
more than 30 years now, and during that time we have built a sizable
body of work and created a number of conventions, some useful and
some pretty stupid ("blow up everything that can blow
up") but hanging on for historical reasons. Most histories
of videogames have been histories of the business, concentrating
on the personalities and financial side rather than the games themselves;
Rusel de Maria and Johnny Wilson's High Score!: The Illustrated
History of Electronic Games (McGraw-Hill Osborne, 2003) is a
good example. J.C. Herz' Joystick Nation (Little, Brown,
& Co., 1997) is also good, but it's more of a sociological commentary
on the effect of games on their players and the community at large.
I'm not particularly interested in the sociology of players; that
way leads to Marketing. I'm more interested in the potential of
the medium, an avenue of thought that leads to Art.
From
the design standpoint, I haven't seen any better history of the
game industry, and more importantly what that history means, than
Steven Poole's Trigger Happy: The Inner Life of Videogames
(Fourth Estate, 2000). Poole looks inwards, not outwards, not so
much at what games do but at what they're about. The book is witty,
well-written, and thoroughly-researched (it was the first to teach
me that the first videogame was not Pong, nor yet Spacewar,
but William Higginbotham's Tennis for Two, played on an analog
computer with an oscilloscope). A good example of his thoughtfulness,
and one that I intend to borrow for my own lecture on architecture
and videogames, comes from the final chapter. He's talking about
the emotion of wonder:
Videogames
at their best build awe-inspiring spaces from immaterial light.
They are cathedrals of fire. Now, it is true that the great cathedrals
of Europe, at Rome, Chartres, or Köln, purposively evoke
wonder not as a purely aesthetic end in itself, but as a means
to lead the spectator to humble contemplation of his or her impotence
in the face of the grandeur of God. Videogames, on the other hand,
represent the latest stage in the secularization of wonder that
has been abroad since the fine arts were divorced from religion
and aesthetics was invented. Some people deplore this development;
others argue intriguingly that that wonder has always been equally
a secular instinct, providing the motivation for empirical scientific
investigation.
I
don't agree with all of Poole's conclusions, but that's all right:
I admire the breadth of his vision and his willingness to wear his
heart on his sleeve.
I
quit being a programmer a long time ago, and that's a one-way door:
the amount I would have to learn to go back to it is prohibitive.
However, I do keep one book around for reference when I want to
research something about finite state machines or scripting. That's
Core Techniques and Algorithms in Game Programming (New Riders
Games, 2003) by the irrepressible Daniel Sanchez-Crespo Dalmau.
It's fat, it's heavy, and it covers some of everything. Definitely
useful if you want a solid grounding in the techniques of modern
game programming. Loads of code samples and quotations from Picasso
too.
For
pure theory, I look no farther than Katie Salen and Eric Zimmerman's
Rules of Play: Game Design Fundamentals (MIT Press, 2004).
This massive, comprehensive book dissects games, play, and gameplay
down to their atomic components and discusses them in detail. It
tends to consider non-digital and digital games interchangeably,
since rules are rules wherever you are. If you want to know about
the effects of positive and negative feedback, or the difference
between a cheater and a spoil-sport, this is the place
to come. It also includes numerous references to the great theoretical
works of Huizinga, Callois, and Sutton-Smith, among others, so it's
an excellent starting point for deeper reading.
Rules
of Play is not a primary source for those who want to learn
how to design commercial videogames, because the book doesn't give
any how-to advice about writing design documents or working with
a development team. But it's invaluable for understanding the possible
consequences of your design decisions.
In
videogames players often have to make life-or-death choices in a
split second, often based on numeric quantities like health or mana
points. A good game makes this information clearly available; a
bad one hides it amid a lot of other data that the player needs
less frequently. To create a good visual design, read three books
by Edward Tufte, a professor of both political science and statistics
at Yale University. I've mentioned them in an earlier column ("Cartographic
Cartwheels") but I think they're worth bringing up again.
They're about displaying information efficiently and unambiguously.
Although really intended for graphic designers and print media,
user interface designers can learn a lot from them too. The books
are called The Visual Display of Quantitative Information,
Envisioning Information, and Visual Explanations: Images
and Quantities, Evidence and Narrative. They're large-format
hardbacks, beautifully produced and printed in color. They're full
of examples both good and bad -- the unreadable manual of emergency
procedures for an aircraft would be hilarious if it weren't so scary.
All are published by Tufte's own company, Graphics Press. One warning,
though: he's not too fond of computers - says the screens are far
too low-resolution compared with high quality printing. Well, he's
got a point.
I
do, obviously, own a copy of my book, Andrew Rollings and Ernest
Adams on Game Design (New Riders Games, 2003), which I actually
use for reference from time to time and I think is still the best
general-purpose book on videogame design on the market (if we didn't,
we wouldn't have written it). However this isn't meant to be an
advertisement so that's all I'll say.
I
own other books that are directly on point with respect to game
design, but to be honest, I don't use them very much - I bought
them mostly to research the competition while Andrew and I were
working on ours. My next batch of books is rather eclectic and reflects
my own design interests more than anything else.
I
borrowed a tattered paperback copy of The Prince, by Niccoló
Machiavelli, from my grandmother when I was 18, and only replaced
it when it fell apart twenty years later. It's short, incisive,
and devastating: the classic analysis of statesmanship and power,
particularly the power of despots and dictators. Anybody who wants
to make a game about how human beings behave in such circumstances
should read it, even if they're only making up the backstory.
Extraordinary
Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, by Charles Mackay,
is an insightful and acidly witty look at the lunatic behavior of
people in groups. The author examines both the tulip mania of 1624
and the South Sea Bubble, both crazes that made the dot-com boom
and bust look like kid stuff. His most interesting study, however,
is about the Crusades - especially the First Crusade, in which a
huge percentage of the population of Europe simply downed tools
and started walking towards Jerusalem, led by charismatic religious
maniacs. Neither the armed might of the nobility nor the warnings
of the supposedly all-powerful Church were able to dissuade them,
and most of them died of starvation on the way. A good example of
how nice neat simulations of human behavior can't tell the whole
story, because when people get in big enough crowds, they completely
lose their reason. There's also a useful history of alchemy for
the medieval RPG types.
The
fact that I include a history of the Crusades should tell you that
I'm a fan of medieval history, so Barbara Tuchman's A Distant
Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century (Ballantine Books, 1987)
is another valued work. Tuchman argues that the 14th century was
a distant mirror of the 20th, with its splendor, pageantry and wealth
and its poverty, wars, and plagues all mixed in together. A multi-faceted
world, and one that's not easy to pin down in convenient stereotypes,
whether positive or negative. It serves as a good reminder that
a human universe is a living thing, always far more complex than
we realize. Someday we'll build fantasy universes as rich as the
real one - if we make the effort to try.
As
far as fiction is concerned, there's too much to mention it all
so I'll confine myself to a few major series. First, everything
Tolkien wrote. Even if you don't like Tolkien, his work is so utterly
seminal to modern fantasy, including computer games, that a person
without some knowledge of it is handicapped. The early works of
William Gibson, if you want to know where the best grim, gritty
science fiction first came from. Gibson should have been a film
director: he's got an amazing visual imagination and the
ability to convey his vision in fresh, exciting language.
However,
I've pretty much been through my cyberpunk phase and am now looking
for deeper and more life-affirming messages, which can often be
found in the works of Ursula K. LeGuin, particularly her stunning
Earthsea Trilogy. (I regard the "fourth" novel in the
series, Tehanu, as an interloper and failed experiment.)
Finally, the Aubrey-Maturin series of historical novels about a
sea captain and a ship's surgeon during the Napoleonic Wars are
my current favorites. The author is Patrick O'Brian, a man who seemed
to have stepped out of the early 19th century and is able to bring
it to vivid, elegant, warm, profane, and often very funny life on
the page. Being fed up with childhood propaganda about the American
Revolution, I never gave a damn for the Georgian or Regency period;
O'Brian changed my mind and made me a fascinated student of the
era.
As
for reference works, a quick list should suffice. Forget Webster,
The Chambers Dictionary is far superior, both in comprehensiveness
and in the quality of the etymologies. My wife also owns the Oxford
English Dictionary on CD-ROM for the ultimate in etymological
thoroughness, but it's expensive as all get-out and doesn't give
pronunciations. The Encyclopedia Britannica on CD (the print
edition is temporarily in storage) is a vital tool. Bulfinch's
Mythology and Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
are also both standbys, although Bulfinch is bowdlerized to suit
Victorian sensibilities. Plus I've got many of the world's sacred
texts, including the Bible, the Koran, the Analects
of Confucius, the Tao Te Ching and the Book of Mormon.
I'd like to add some Indian mythology too, filled as it is with
wondrous stories and characters.
All
in all, an odd but useful batch of stuff - obviously there's a lot
more that I didn't have room to mention. There are also some major
gaps - I really need a good book on AI that manages to walk the
line between rah-rah enthusiasm and technical impenetrability (the
first meeting of my class in LISP was also my last). And I need
lots more works on psychology, anthropology, architecture, art,
and political science.
Online,
Project Gutenberg and Bartleby.com are the places I resort to most
when looking for books. But there's still nothing quite like taking
a fat tome down from the shelf and flipping through the pages to
find something you need. Online works may be fast and efficient
to access, but they don't offer the warming intellectual pleasure
of knowing: I own a good book.
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