Latest News
spacer View All spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
Ubisoft Q3 Sales Drop 2.7 Percent, Nine-Month Sales Sink 22.5 Percent
 
Dragon Age: Origins Sells In 3.2 Million Units [3]
 
Interview: Composer Garry Schyman Talks BioShock Soundtracks [1]
spacer
Latest Features
spacer View All spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
arrow Television, Meet Games
 
arrow Two Halves, Together: Patrick Gilmore On Double Helix [1]
 
arrow The Road To Hell: The Creative Direction of Dante's Inferno [19]
spacer
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
Lineage 2 Interview - 'Freya Update Is Just a Beginning' - Pt.2
 
Swashbuckling for Landlubbers: Why you may already be encouraging piracy! [12]
 
Lineage 2 Interview - 'Freya Update Is Just a Beginning' - Pt.1
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
2K Games
Web Designer
 
Super Happy Fun Fun
Senior Software Engineer
 
Tarsier Studios
Senior Game Designer
 
Tarsier Studios
Senior Game Engine Programmer
 
Konami Digital Entertainment Co., Ltd.
Sound designer
 
Trion Redwood City
Sr. Environment Modeler
 
Trion Redwood City
Sr. Graphics Programmer
 
Vicarious Visions / Activision
Tools Programmer
spacer
About
spacer News Director:
Leigh Alexander
Features Director:
Christian Nutt
Editor At Large:
Chris Remo
Advertising:
John 'Malik' Watson
Recruitment/Education:
Gina Gross
 
Feature Submissions
About
spacer If you enjoy reading this site, you might also want to check out these Think Services sites:

Game Career Guide (for student game developers.)

Indie Games (for independent game players/developers.)

Finger Gaming (news, reviews, and analysis on iPhone and iPod Touch games.)

GamerBytes (for the latest console digital download news.)

Worlds In Motion (discussing the business of online worlds.)

Game Set Watch (the Group's alt.game weblog.)
News

  Mobile Editorial: The Shroud Creators On The GPS Gaming Hurdle
by Justin Davis, Modojo.com
0 comments
Share RSS
 
 
October 9, 2006
 
Mobile Editorial:  The Shroud  Creators On The GPS Gaming Hurdle
Advertisement
"It’s 2006 and we are on the verge of the PlayStation 3 and the Nintendo Wii joining Microsoft’s Xbox 360 in the next-generation console wars. However, if you were to add all three companies’ existing and expected next-generation sales some people might be surprised to find out that not even the big three combined can beat the cell phone in terms of units on the street or in market penetration.

As technology advances, cell phones are increasingly being jammed with more advanced features such as memory chips, graphic cards and even Global Position Satellite (GPS) chips. There has been a lot of talk these last few years about what GPS capability could mean to gaming in general, but thus far there has been little to show for all this talk. There have been a few attempts by various companies to enter the GPS gaming market with GPS-only games, but nothing that has captured the imagination of those willing and able to play.

Why is it that GPS gaming, or more specifically location-based gaming, has had such a hard time taking off? There is a host of reasons, but at the end of the day, one reason more than any other comes to mind – failure to follow through and remain dedicated to educating the gaming public.

I would say that the responsibility to push location-based gaming rests predominantly on the shoulders of developers and publishers. Obviously operator support is imperative and any game developed won’t sell without deck placement, but an operator can’t sell something that does not exist. Yes, there are a few location-based games out in the marketplace, however, take a look at them and one will quickly find they are games that lack the feature-set which would allow gamers to play when they don’t have a GPS or cell Internet connection.

It makes perfect sense to make a game that only supports GPS gameplay if companies assume gamers know what GPS games are and how to play them. The big problem with location-based games thus far is that we are making these assumptions and that, predictably, consumers are not responding as well as we might want them to. Location-based games are new and we cannot expect a gamer to change their gaming habits overnight without a few growing pains. It is totally unrealistic to expect gamers to pick up a full fledged location-based game without easing them into the technology.

Game developers and publishers need to educate the public about the benefits of GPS gaming, slowly easing them into this new genre. An analogy I like to use when trying to describe what Your World Games has done with The Shroud, our first GPS-enabled game, is that Your World Games assumes gamers are new to the world of mobile and most certainly GPS gaming.

So, we take them into the kiddie pool, then, after some practice with learning how to “swim” with blow up floats and other support devices, we lead them into the shallow end of the pool and have them start “swimming” on their own, giving them the confidence to mess around a bit all the while knowing they can’t drown. Eventually once the gamer is ready to jump off the high board, Your World Games will be right there alongside them.

Perhaps it’s a bit of a silly analogy, but it’s valid nonetheless. Basically what I’m trying to say is that we can’t expect a person who has never played a GPS game to go out and buy a video game that only uses GPS without incorporating non-GPS gameplay. A key feature to The Shroud is that to support the great GPS gaming we incorporated single player and networked gameplay that rivals any other game on or coming to the market.

Gamers are smart, they know what they want and one of the key things gamers want these days are choices. The ability to play alone while sitting on the subway where they don’t have a network or GPS connection; the ability to play while sitting in the store via a GPRS connection against 10 other gamers with connected leaderboards; or the ability to play in the streets battling evil or other gamers via GPS.

The problem with location-based games and their rise to prominence in the mobile world is not with the lack of interest on the part of gamers, but rather in that gamers are confused. I make GPS games and even I find them confusing. I would really like to see location-based gaming grow. To do that the industry needs to release games that evolve location-based gameplay, with a variety of different location-based gaming elements. Giving gamers choices and helping them to understand location-based games certainly can’t hurt the industry, but it might make all the difference in helping it grow.

Robert Sprogis
Vice President, Your World Games LTD"

[Robert and the rest of Your World Games are currently putting the finishing touches on The Shroud, the company's first release, and the first GPS-enabled mobile RPG.

This mobile editorial was produced in association with Modojo.com ahead of the launch of Gamasutra's new mobile game business site, for which more information will be available in the near future.]
 
   
 
Comments

none
 
Comment:
 


Submit Comment