The Toolbox Approach to F2P Game Design

Post on 26-Jun-2015

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While the fundamentals of free-to-play game design seem simple, adapting to this model and understanding it to the depth required to make a successful game has proved a tough challenge even for the most experienced game creators. One effective way to tackle F2P design is to think of its various techniques as a "toolbox"; by building up a collection of design "tools" which you can use to acquire, retain and monetise your players, you can build a comprehensive understanding of how this new business model interacts with your existing game design talents.

Transcript of The Toolbox Approach to F2P Game Design

The toolbox approach to F2P game

designNicholas Lovell

#f2ptoolbox

Early stage

Late stage

Game design

Frameworks and toolboxes

A disclaimer

Nobody knows anything

1. The funnel

A

M

R

Acquire

Retain

Monetise

Keep monetising

ARM yourself

• Hoping for the best is not good enough, you need to ARM yourself– ACQUISITION: How do I get people through the door

cost-effectively?– RETENTION: How do I keep people coming back for

more?– MONETISATION: How do I build money-making

strategies into gameplay• Acquisition and monetisation are important• Retention is the most important, by far.

2. The pyramid

• The Core Loop is the beating heart of your game

• The Retention Game is what keeps players playing

• The Superfan Game is where the Superfans live

3. The Curve

PRICE

Demand

Revenue opportunity

Marketing opportunity

What AAA asks

“How can I get customers who don’t

want to spend $60 to spend $6?”

What F2P asks

“How can I get customers who do want to spend

$60 to love spending $600, or $6,000?”

There are many different toolboxes

• 4. The Hero’s Journey (read The Writer’s Journey by Christopher Vogler)

• 5. The psychology of marketing (read Influence, the Principles of Persuasion, by Robert Cialdini)

• Any number of game design books (e.g. A Theory of Fun, Raph Koster, or A Book of Lenses, Jesse Schell.)

Here are some of my tools

Conclusion

• Use frameworks and tools that you find useful• Have some for design AND some for business• Find them from anywhere:– Psychology– Writing– Marketing– Economics

• Or just borrow mine

Thank you@nicholaslovell@gamesbrief

www.gamesbrief.com

www.f2ptoolbox.com#f2ptoolbox