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News - Don’t Miss: How Bloodborne’s design makes players the experience points

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Don’t Miss: How Bloodborne’s design makes players the experience points

<div style="margin: 5px 5% 10px 5%;"><img src="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/dont-miss-how-bloodbornes-design-makes-players-the-experience-points.png" width="500" height="438" title="" alt="" /></div><div><p><strong><em>Tim Rogers is a game developer and writer. His next game is&nbsp;</em><a href="http://videoball.net/">Videoball</a>&nbsp;<em>for PS4, Xbox One, and Steam.</em></strong></p>
<p><span>Do the </span><em>Souls</em><span> games have a Secret Design Formula? Well, yes. As far as I can tell, here it is:</span></p>
<p>1. Have good taste<br /> 2. Have a lot of money<br /> 3. Make something you like</p>
<p>Now that I’ve used up my “say something snippy” quota for the week, I want to be serious about <em>Bloodborne</em> and the <em>Souls</em> games: I like them a lot.</p>
<p>I like them because they have great action design, they have great level design, and they have great experience design. I’ll talk about those three things in that order. If you are one of those people whose first instinct is to ask for a “short version” in the comments, here it is: <em>Souls</em> games are great because of action warm-ups. Put action warm-ups on everything. If you don’t know or can’t deduce what I mean when I say action warm-up, I’m sorry: you’re going to have to read the long version.</p>
<p>Controlling a humanoid character in a game has always been, for me, a mildly body-horrible experience. Some games try to make the experience more comfortable — <em>Super Mario Galaxy</em> calmed the length of <em>Mario</em>‘s trademark slide to a stop, probably to make the game easier for new players — and this only makes me feel weirder. Other games, like <em>Assassin’s Creed</em>, go all-out floppy, though only when you’re holding The Happy Puppy Button — just hold the right trigger and move the analog stick, and your character sprints around, grabbing onto and climbing up over any surface the level designer tagged as grabbable or upoverclimbable. This makes for a surreal out-of-body experience for me: Why did I grab that and not that? Oh no, I just wanted to run up these stairs to get to my ship’s steering wheel faster, and now I’m running up the railing — and now I’m jumping toward that other railing — and now I’m hanging on another railing — and now I need a shower.</p>
<p>This is part of the reason why I like <a href="http://videoball.net/">games about simple polygons</a>.</p>
<p>The <em>Souls</em> games, meanwhile, perform a civilized fancy dance (maybe a waltz) with the body-horror of using a video game controller to remote-control a humanlike character inside a television. They do this by putting you far outside your comfort zone via jerky body movements, actions of unexpectable timing, and collisions of mysterious geometry. I’ll try to talk about what I mean by all three of those in separate, though my most important top-level impression is that <em>Bloodborne</em> (and the <em>Souls</em> games) makes Floppy Body Game Design work because though its Puppy is Happy (so to speak), every action, however floppy, is of exact predictability. When you press the button to attack, the character begins a weird drunken kung-fu-movie swirl as they contort to whip the heavy object around into a deadly angle. This swirly, loopy, floppy, happy puppy of a noodly delay before the pounce is the action warm-up, and it is maybe the most important element of <em>Souls</em> action design.</p>
<blockquote><p>&nbsp; </p>
<h6><span>“This swirly, loopy, floppy, happy puppy of a noodly delay before the pounce is the action warm-up, and it is maybe the most important element of <em>Souls</em> action design.”</span></h6>
</blockquote>
<p>Maybe the most important (and I don’t say “most important” lightly) element of <em>Bloodborne</em> (and the <em>Souls</em> games’) success is their rock-solid foundation as action games. Maybe the most important (and I’m still not saying “most important” lightly) element of <em>Bloodborne</em> and the <em>Souls</em> games’ success as action games is the designers’ unbending, unswerving devotion to (sometimes shockingly) long warm-ups and cool-downs on every button action (I say “button action” because movement is also an action; it just doesn’t involve a button).</p>
<p>Your character’s attacks all have warm-ups and cool-downs. The enemies’ attacks have warm-ups and cool-downs. If you chain together multiple attacks, the next attack in the sequence requires a shorter warm-up. When I say the controls in the <em>Souls</em> games are “responsive,” I mean your character responds with perfect immediacy to your pressing the attack button. Only the response is not an attack: it is a warm-up into an attack. Did you think before you told the character to do that? If the answer is “no,” you might not have been playing this game very long.</p>
<p>The warm-up into the attack is the same length every time. When you press the button, you’re making the decision to invest that exact length of time into launching that attack. Therefore, the controls are, in fact, “Perfectly Responsive” — just not in the way that clicking a mouse to fire a rifle in <em>Call of Duty</em> might be.</p>
<p>An enemy confrontation is an invitation to decision: you will evade, attack, or run away. Evading is a multi-pronged decision: maybe you want to evade because the enemy is winding up an attack, and you want a better position. Attacking presents you multiple decisions as well: maybe you will do a quick attack, or maybe you have time for a slow attack.</p>
<p>In <em>Bloodborne</em>, as in any <em>Souls</em> game, Your Brain is the Experience Points. Each enemy has an attack warm-up timing, post-attack cool-down timing, attack range, and attack speed. These games require, expect, want, and beg the players to learn to identify the first attack of a combo by the visual presentation of its wind-up. These wind-ups always fall far short of the theatricality of a <em>Super Mario 64</em> boss or a <em>Zelda</em> boss: These enemies do not run in place for three seconds, kicking up dust clouds, before charging at you. No, it’s always something understated: if the chubby troll in front of you just squatted down halfway for a half a second, it’s going to charge at you. You should dash out of the way. If it shudders for a second, it’s about to raise up that brick in its hand. If it raises up that brick in its hand, it’s going to bash you with it. Fire your pistol and the troll will fall to its knees. This is a simple example of an enemy whose telegraphs are easy to read, and so we encounter another spider web of these games’ design: if an enemy’s invisible “Telegraph Trickiness” number is low, its raw physical power is probably massive. Weaker enemies’ telegraphs are tricky and stealthy as heck: you’ll need to watch whether a dude is pointing his rake down or holding it parallel to the ground before you decide whether to attack head-on or reposition yourself.</p>
<p>Repositioning yourself is a good choice much of the time. The level design is miserly about giving you perfect position. The enemies move in unpredictable patterns. The enemies are part of the level design. You’ll always want a better position. It’s maddening. It’s great.</p>
<p>When people say a <em>Souls</em> game is “hard”, they’re saying one of three things:</p>
<ul>
<li>They don’t like repeating the same part of a game over and over</li>
<li>They don’t like when a game gives them a number and then takes it away</li>
<li>Either innately or because of psychological friction, that the first two bullet points instantiate in this player’s brain; the player is impatient to such a near-total density that exercising patience is “hard,” if not impossible.</li>
</ul>
<p>The trick to the <em>Souls</em> games’ “difficulty” is that these games always require patience. Enemies will always hit you if their attack warm-up is past the point of no return — past the point during which you could have executed a fast attack to cut them off. You need to pay attention. Maybe you’re replaying a level for the tenth time, and your impatience is borderline demon-possessed. You might run down some stairs and swing at the guy waiting there. However, he saw you running down those stairs and started his attack. The game is saying: Look, you’ve killed some dudes in this game before. You can do it again if you just pay attention.</p>
<p>Rushing kills you. The game wants you to be thoughtful. The game wants you to think about your place in its world, on both the macro and micro scale. On the nano scale, the game wants you to know when an attack is definitely coming, and to not be standing there like an idiot when it arrives. It wants you to change position.</p>
<blockquote><p>&nbsp; </p>
<h6><span>“The enemies move in unpredictable patterns. The enemies are part of the level design. You’ll always want a better position. It’s maddening. It’s great.”</span></h6>
</blockquote>
<p>Changing position is such a big piece of <em>Bloodborne</em> that it has its own action button. If you’re locked on to an enemy (click the right stick (fitting, since the right stick controls the camera)), all you need to do is press the Agility Button. “The Agility Button” is what I call the circle button: with it, you can roll (tap it while walking and not locked on), you can run (hold it while walking and not locked on), or you can do the evasive dash-step while locked on.</p>
<p>If you press the agility button without touching the left analog stick, your player dash-jumps backward. Press the button in tandem with any direction on the left analog stick to dash-jump in that direction. You are not invincible during this dash jump, though you certainly can cover a longer distance than most enemy attack ranges in a shorter amount of time than most enemy attack warm-ups. Of course, this dash has a cool-down of hopeless vulnerability when you reach its endpoint. And of course, this game is not about one-on-one combat, so your dash-step might put you two inches in front of another psycho monster who is past the point of no return in its attack warm-up.</p>
<p><em>Bloodborne</em>‘s side-step is a friendly gesture: The designers took away the shield of previous <em>Souls</em> games, and now they want you to play with something better than a shield — rather than stand helplessly behind a portable wall, the game now allows you to be somewhere else in an instant. “Somewhere else” is a risk, of course, in that it could also be “somewhere deadly.” It’s up to you to learn how to control this evasive maneuver. In true <em>Souls</em> Game fashion, it doesn’t make itself easy. In fact, the better you get at it, the more you overestimate your skill, and the harder it becomes.</p>
<p><em>Bloodborne</em>‘s side-step mechanic runs further with this Weird Body Game Design than any previous <em>Souls</em> game.</p>
<p>The quick step will shoot your body with speed enough to evade an attack. The distance the sidestep launches you is unsettling in its quirk; it evades the instincts of muscle memory. It’s not exactly as fast and as far as your brain wants to think it should be. It’s a little bit slower and a little bit farther. It might put you into attack range of an enemy who is past the point of no return on its attack warm-up. It’s maddening. The sidestep begs you to learn its way instead of holding onto yours.</p>
<p><em>Bloodborne</em>‘s attack warm-ups and sidestep are what I call “actions of commitment” — you press a button in a specific context to begin a “long-haul” process that commits your character to the completion of the action. This “long haul” might only be one or two seconds. To paraphrase Vin Diesel, for those one or two seconds, you’re alive (well, you’re more alive if you’re sure of your ultimate success).</p>
<p>When I think of actions of commitment, I think of the early <em>Castlevania</em> games — specifically <em>Dracula X: Rondo of Blood</em>. In these games, every enemy encounter is a tiny boxing match. <em>Rondo of Blood</em> is so thick with commitment actions that it literally places a warm-up on turning around! Think about that: it takes almost a full second to turn around in <em>Rondo of Blood</em>. This is a side-scrolling platform action game from 1993, and its designers were thinking that hard about risk-reward. <em>Rondo of Blood</em> places so much importance on second-to-second action that, fully knowing that it has implemented “turning around” as an action choice, it allows the player to walk backward by holding the attack button. Ducking and jumping also have warm-ups, so if an enemy is using projectiles that the player wants to duck under or jump over, the player needs to decide if they have enough room and time to duck or jump, or if they need to move in the opposite direction a little bit to earn more time and space.</p>
<p>All the elements of every enemy encounter are in perfect concert: The projectiles move just slower than you can walk, and ducking takes a non-insubstantial amount of time to activate, during which the projectile might hit you. You can turn around to move to the left to avoid the projectile, or you can hold the attack button. If the projectile is an axe knight’s axe, you can whip it out of the air. However, your attack has a warm-up, and a fixed distance. You need to be in the right place and have enough time in order to whip that axe out of the air. You can jump over a low axe if you have the time; you can duck under a high axe. You can be facing either direction for either of these things. If you hold the attack button, you can be facing your enemy, stepping backward, jumping over some axes, ducking under some axes, whipping some out of the air, fighting for inches forward. It’s maddening for the first-time player. It’s fine wine for the twenty-year veteran. <em>Rondo of Blood</em>‘s sequel, <em>Symphony of the Night</em>, swapped the heavyweight action out for <em>Super Metroid</em>-like exploration and role-playing-game elements (numbers which go up).</p>
<p>I like to think that <em>Demon’s Souls</em> put the heavyweight action back into <em>Castlevania</em>, without removing the exploration elements. <em>Souls</em> is the new old <em>Castlevania</em>.</p>
<p>Heavyweight action games always put you in vulnerable positions, though an escape — either via countering your opponent or sidestepping — is only a fast decision, a button press, and a tingly warm-up animation away. These games are about seeing the decision fast enough to choose it.</p>
<p>The stamina bar is a curious complication. It’s a green bar beneath your (red) health bar. When you attack, roll, sprint, or sidestep, your stamina bar depletes. When your stamina reaches zero, you can’t perform an action. The stamina bar recovers on its own. If you go all-in and combo-attack an enemy to the limit of your stamina bar, you can wind up with not enough stamina remaining to either roll away or attack again. The stamina bar running out mid-rousing-combo manufactures a situation wherein your enemy is able to begin an attack warm-up while you are unable to do likewise. It’s possible that an enemy will decide to initiate a long warm-up during your stamina bar zero moment. It’s possible you’ll recover enough stamina during the enemy’s warm-up that you’ll be able to use a quick attack that hurts the enemy before their warm-up reaches the point of no return. This is where even a player with dozens of hours of experience is going to mash a button, hoping to catch the stamina meter at the exact moment it reaches enough stamina to perform a quick attack. Your muscle memory doesn’t translate this command into words, so it has a tendency to trip even the hardest brain: You want enough stamina to interrupt that big attack long enough for you to be able to walk backward for just long enough to recover just enough stamina to perform a back-step that will put you far enough out of range for long enough that when you greet your opponent’s approach, it is with a stamina meter long enough and ready to execute a killing combo. The game has attached itself to your reflexes on a molecular level. Your brain and fingers take turns being the bar and the athlete in an exhibition of cognitive gymnastics.</p>
<blockquote><p>&nbsp; </p>
<h6><span>“The game is saying: Look, you’ve killed some dudes in this game before. You can do it again if you just pay attention.”</span></h6>
</blockquote>
<p>The stamina bar running out instigates a necessity to decide upon a better position (if you want to avoid damage or death). Deeper skills require hyper-passive awareness of the stamina meter, on a level from which you’re considering your position at all times, and how that position will change based on your decisions or your enemies’ decisions. <em>Souls</em> games are at times naval battles in which your boat looks exactly like a person.</p>
<p>If I were to draw a diagram to illustrate the importances of awareness of position (your own and your enemies’, relative to your own weapon ranges and your enemies’ weapon ranges), timing (your own and your enemies’), and stamina (your own) in <em>Souls</em> games, I’d be drawing an equilateral triangle.</p>
<p><em>Bloodborne</em> adds a maddening little difference that is equal parts insulting and delightful. I tried to play this game cold and unspoiled, though that became impossible when I also had access to Twitter. It turns out <em>Bloodborne</em> officially calls this the “Regain System”: If an enemy hits you, doing damage, you can get your health back if you hit them soon enough after they hit you. This is idiotic. This is insulting! This is a huge, dumb punch in the face of a perfect combat system. It’s filthy and it’s gross. Wow, it’s so great; I love it a lot.</p>
<p>With the Regain System, <em>Bloodborne</em> begs you to take tiny risks. I say the risks are “tiny” because that’s how it feels: just one more button press. That button press is highly likely to get you killed, because for the length of that button press — the first few dozen times, anyway — you’re not thinking about position, timing, or stamina. You’re thinking, “Hey, I can get that health back, so let’s see if I can get that health back.” Ten seconds later, the enemy is dead, and you have half the health you had during your initial engagement with the enemy. You feel like the biggest sucker in the world. You’ve seen the Wizard of Oz behind the curtain. The Wizard of Oz was flipping you off.</p>
<p>The Regain System, too, with cold eventuality, grafts itself onto your body the way every element of a <em>Souls</em> game does. It pencils in another Interesting Decision on your laundry list. For a moment in the middle of every slugfest, you’re looking at a chessboard. It’s not a super-detailed chessboard. Maybe it has four pieces on it. Are you going to use your rook to take a rook? Are you going to use your bishop to take that knight? Why isn’t there a king or a queen?</p>
<p>You misjudge either your timing or your position. The enemy hits you. The white vertical slash at the end of your life meter moves to the left, to illustrate a depletion. The life to the left of the white slash is red; the life to the right of the white slash is orange. It’s going to be orange for a couple of seconds.</p>
<ul>
<li>I just got hit. I can get that health back if I hit this guy again.</li>
<li>Can I hit him again? He is winding up an attack.</li>
<li>If I side-step him, maybe that guy over there is going to be in the middle of winding up an attack.</li>
<li>If I back-step, well, do I know who’s behind me? Maybe there’s a box on the ground.</li>
</ul>
<p>This internal monologue plays out thousands of different ways in a second. Sometimes it’s screaming at you to calm down. It’s endlessly fascinating.</p>
<p>When you let your brain think about the Regain System in the middle of a battle, our game of My Weird Warm-Up Versus Your Weird Cooldown, Your Weird Warm-Up Versus My Weird Cooldown, and Our Weird Warmups Versus Each Other (and All of Time) has boarded an express elevator for the penthouse (or the dungeon).</p>
<p>Learning when to let go is a skill as surely as the momentary courage to allow something unexpectably good to happen upon taking a risk is a skill; <em>Bloodborne</em> asks you to learn to decide to let go in the context of every single mundane encounter.</p>
<p>When I used the word “mundane” in the previous sentence, I meant that these battle encounters are “mundane” in the greater scope of <em>Bloodborne</em>. In any other game, the smallest player-versus-drone battles of <em>Bloodborne</em> would be without a doubt the standout element. In <em>Bloodborne</em>, they’re only one of three tent poles.</p>
<p>In conclusion: If, like me, a doctor recently prescribed you reading glasses, it’s because that doctor wanted you to wear them when playing <em>Bloodborne</em>. (In seriousness, my eyes focus and track faster when I am wearing reading glasses, so I do in fact wear reading glasses while playing <em>Bloodborne</em>, though not with other games. Maybe that’s interesting! Maybe it’s not.)</p>
<p>The second of <em>Bloodborne</em> (and the <em>Souls</em> games’) three tent poles is the level design.</p>
<p>The level design in these games is excellent.</p>
<p>In both <em>Demon’s Souls</em> and in <em>Bloodborne</em>, the player starts in a dark, uninviting environment full of tall walls, staircases up and down, and right-angle turns. It’s easy to get turned around or lost in these levels. The game is teaching you to remember space. You inch through each level. You turn right sometimes. You turn left sometimes. Sometimes you take the stairs up; sometimes you take the stairs down.</p>
<p>Enemies wait throughout these sprawling mazes. Sometimes you will run past them. Sometimes you will fight them. Sometimes they will kill you. If they kill you, maybe the next time you attempt the level, you’ll try to go right when last time you went left. You’re looking for something — you’re not sure what, because the game seems to not want to tell you — so you’re moving through the level. You’re trying to make progress, because the blindfolding right-angle turns and dead-end alleys are so cold in their refusal to etch themselves into your sense of direction’s memory that you’re certain the whole game experience is a clever trick designed to demotivate you. You have just post-motivated yourself.</p>
<p>Enemies are strong because the game wants you to think. Enemies kill you because you didn’t think. In your impatience to get farther and see more, an enemy who you killed ten times has just killed you without your getting a single hit in. Every time you stop to fight some weird bearded or skeletal drone, the memories of the right-angle left turn and downward staircase ahead begin to fade like a dream upon waking. Enemy threats suggest a pace. You decide the pace. You will go faster or slower than the pace the enemies suggest. Either decision can kill you.</p>
<p>The very first time, in <em>Demon’s Souls</em>, you loop around and unlock a door that had stared you in the face at the very beginning of the game, it feels like an accident. Let me tell you about that accident: It knocks the wind out of you. If you’ve ever had a moment of great or terrible luck in your life, you know what I’m talking about: the weight of the “I Totally Almost Didn’t Do That One Tiny Thing That Ended Up Putting Me Right Here” is enough to almost physically implode your skull.</p>
<p><em>Demon’s Souls</em> dances with you for an hour; it steps on your feet a hundred times. You fight for and earn a knack for jumping on hunches. You know which of the multiple paths ahead of you now is best. You pause. You go the opposite way. You traverse a lonely corridor. You flip a switch. A door opens. Oh, hey: It’s that first area in the level. No part of your brain is disappointed. Your entire brain is in love with your having connected these two regions. Then, in an instant, your entire brain is aflame with the What-Ifs. “What if I hadn’t gone this way and something had killed me? I’d have to have done this all again.” You feel bad because of something that didn’t happen. It’s amazing. It’s a symptom of two things:</p>
<ul>
<li>You would have immediately reloaded the game and tried again anyway.</li>
<li>You won’t stop loving this game.</li>
</ul>
<p>I’ve played some <em>Souls</em> games. I like <em>Demon’s Souls</em> the most. I love the level design in <em>Demon’s Souls</em>. I’ve played through that game a couple times. I like its minimalist, bucket-headed-knight-armor look and world-feel.</p>
<p>Maybe because I’ve studied <em>Demon’s Souls</em> with such care, I’ve gotten good at memorizing right angles. So I pumped my fist with ferocity when, in <em>Bloodborne</em>, I discovered the first shortcut: Journeying deeper into that first area, I stopped and said, “The lamp is around that corner.” I went around the corner. I opened a gate. There was the lamp (the warp / spawn points in <em>Bloodborne</em> are lamps). It felt great. I felt such a ghostly pat on the back at this moment. No, the game isn’t a villain trying to trick me — it’s an old friend keeping me on my toes.</p>
<p>That’s the word I’d use to describe these games: friendly. These games have uninviting atmospheres and their enemies can crush you: The game is comfortable showing its real face to its best friends. We’re the game’s best friends. Not two hours into my first experience with <em>Demon’s Souls</em>, I knew I’d found a weird best friend that trusted and respected my opinion and my intuition: I was the only friend who could figure it out.</p>
<p>It’s all the joy of a “hidden object” game, now available for hardcore action game players.</p>
<p>Many reviews ladle many similar superlatives on <em>Bloodborne</em>‘s level designs. I also find the levels deserving of these superlatives. The “secret” of these levels is quiet: The levels are alive inside of themselves; they are true to themselves. The geometry is more than “masterful”: it’s alive. This is the product of handcrafting. The levels respect the player who will traverse them. When you respect a player as much as <em>Bloodborne</em> does, level geometry flows naturally.</p>
<p>It’s also a terrifying workflow prospect. Then again, if the game I was doing level design on had combat as good as <em>Bloodborne</em>‘s, I’d love testing my levels.</p>
<p><em>Bloodborne</em>‘s level macro-geometry is cathedraline; Its micro-geometry is all confessionals, phone booths, and hallways. You travel down streets, alleys, and corridors toward vestibules and galleries with holes in the floors and ankle-high apocalypse garbage waiting to thwart any sidestep. The game floods you forward meters at a time before clogging you with inches. The pacing between travel and combat pit-stoppage eschews formula (by which I mean, it’s organic). The game’s designers know and feel the importance of the combat learning curve, and they gingerly spoon it behind the level geometry learning curve. The level geometry needs the combat: without its slow warm-ups and cool-downs and side-steps and weird balloon-animally body-flopping and risky counterattacks, this level geometry wouldn’t be begging you to pay attention. Maybe you wouldn’t pay attention if it wasn’t begging you.</p>
<p>This level geometry wouldn’t work in a first-person shooter.</p>
<p>The combat, however, would work in a one-on-one game whose only stage was a rectangular hallway five shoulder-widths wide.</p>
<p>No, let’s say the one stage is a square, with walls on two parallel sides, and ring-outs on the other two parallel sides.</p>
<p>What I’m saying is, I’ve just crunched the numbers, and if the <em>Souls</em> games’ level design and the <em>Souls</em> games’ action design were people and they got in a fistfight, the action design would win. (This is not a scientific measure.)</p>
<p>Of course, I’m only talking about the level geometry. The experience of the game is the third and final pillar.</p>
<p>Here is a short story about <em>Castlevania</em>: I watched a tool-assisted speed-run of the first <em>Castlevania</em> game a few years ago. In this speed-run, the player moves forward without stopping until a boss appears. Whenever a boss isn’t on the screen, the player is moving forward, until the game is over. Even knowing that the player is likely manipulating luck so that enemies don’t spawn in inconvenient positions, I like the picture that this paints in my head. When I was a kid, I fought tooth and nail to understand <em>Castlevania</em>. My hard battle ended in victory. I spent many months learning every inch of every level of that game. Here’s this speed-run where the player never stops moving, jumping over enemies at just the right time, whipping in the air at just the right time, seizing every opportunity and snapping up every minor and major victory along the way. I mused for a moment that this player was so much more of a <em>Castlevania</em> virtuoso than I had ever been because I had been young, and the game’s schlock-horror motif — film holes on the title screen, Frankenstein’s Monster, the Merman, The Mummy, The Grim Reaper, <em>and</em> Dracula all making an appearance — had impressed into me a need to play a role. I had to “perform” my way through the game. The game wasn’t a socket wrench that I would in a fit of genius learn to use to dismantle itself. It was narrative entertainment. I let it narrate; by playing it, I entertained both the game and myself. I whipped the Medusa heads because I loved whipping Medusa heads; I whipped Medusa heads because Medusa heads loved me whipping them. Et cetera.</p>
<p><img alt height="350" src="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/dont-miss-how-bloodbornes-design-makes-players-the-experience-points.png" width="400"><br /><em><strong>Medusa heads. (<a href="http://www.retronintendoreviews.com/castlevania-nes-review/">Image source</a></strong></em>.)</p>
<p>In the <em>Souls</em> games, too, if complete crushing victory is your goal, The Graphics Are The True Evil. These games are near-humorless in their pressing, thorough, ornate schlock-horror presentation. Every new <em>Souls</em> game sees me into an adjustment period. It takes several hours to tune the guitar of my brain until I am ready to Just Put It On And Hang Out. For those first few hours, a <em>Souls</em> game is a Sipping Drink. The mood of the games pulls me in; I struggle with remembering the old controls and learning my new weapons and enemies. The mood of the graphics and sound intensifies the learning curve.</p>
<p>After a few hours, I’ve moved forward into the game. I understand that I need to go somewhere. I’ve met a boss I have not been able to kill. I’ve collected my fair share of frustrations and complaints (mostly I’m complaining about being frustrated). This on-ramp is my “education” about the game. Eventually, part of this game is going to become Business. I am going to get serious about always killing every type of enemy in the appropriate way. I am going to learn when I can be impatient, and then I’m going to be impatient as much as a responsible person can be. Eventually, I’ll be able to play the game with the sun up outside and the lights on in the living room as I tinker with the business element of the game.</p>
<p>At no time does the game stop being what it promised to be: a weird Victorian gothic horror world. The game is a world. It is lush and dense. It is full of vivid monsters. It couldn’t be uninteresting if it tried. Every monster when alive, struggling, or dead, is an irremovable molecule in this big weird world. Every side alley leading into a sewer leading into a dead-end is irreplaceable. Everything in this world has to be in this world, because the world wouldn’t be real without it. Everything in this game has to be in this game.</p>
<p>At the beginning of this piece, I said that the secret three-step formula for a <em>Souls</em> game’s design is:</p>
<p>1. Have good taste<br /> 2. Have a lot of money<br /> 3. Make something you like</p>
<p>I was mostly joking, though now that I think about it, this really is just about it. The “Have a lot of money” part comes into play especially in crafting as big, bold, self-confident atmosphere as dense and essential as <em>Bloodborne</em>‘s.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Without this atmosphere, the game wouldn’t be itself. This is exactly the atmosphere such a slow-burning ice-cold combat system would wish upon itself.</p>
<p>It’d be a Herculean task to say enough about <em>Bloodborne</em>‘s atmosphere and art direction. I’ll stop at saying it works as well as it does because, like the level geometry, it is natural. It is full of freedom to be itself. The artists knew what they were making. It’s bold and creative and dense, though it’s also held&nbsp;to a rigid mission statement. This game understood itself before it even existed.</p>
<p>In as much as darkness and mood impacts a player’s psychology, graphics are often game design. I can’t think of that being more evident than in a <em>Souls</em> game.</p>
<p>What interests me the most is this clanging collision between mood and mechanics. I don’t just mean how sweaty palms make combat harder — I mean all the weird little surreal, pseudo-accidental handcrafted quirks that stud the entire experience.</p>
<p>In <em>Souls</em> games, you earn “souls” (“Blood Echoes” in <em>Bloodborne</em>, which is a fittingly silly name) by killing enemies. These are your currency. You use them to level up your character, or buy supplies. If an enemy kills you while you’re carrying currency, you drop it where you died. You have one life to get your money back. If you die on your way to get your money back, you lose that earlier stash of money. Your next life gives you the opportunity to get the second pile of money back.</p>
<p>This little gambling meta-system fits un-neatly inside a game that also possesses an oppressive, depressing, humorlessly dark mood and a fine wine of an unwieldy, heavyweight battle system. When you go to get your currency back, you’re</p>
<ul>
<li>Frustrated and impatient because you lost something the game saw fit to number</li>
<li>Wrestling with the same weird controls</li>
<li>Struggling with the same impenetrable mood</li>
<li>Possibly heading toward an environment whose enemies’ movements you have not memorized</li>
</ul>
<p>All this adds up to a vast possibility web, a large portion of which involves you getting lost and killed, losing all your money.</p>
<p>Players know they need money to level up. They love money. They don’t want to lose it. They want to get the money back to the Friendly Zone, and put it in The Bank (You Are The Bank: You put money into your stats).</p>
<p>So now the economics of the enemies are scarier than even their gothic horror art direction: “I’ve never fought one of those before, so I shouldn’t fight one when I am carrying this much money.”</p>
<p>The economics of the level designs are scarier than one of Lovecraft’s actual nightmares: “I shouldn’t go down there if I don’t know how to get back up — at least, not while I’m carrying this much money.”</p>
<p>The lessons in frugality alone make me wish this game wasn’t rated “M” for Mature. Kids need to learn this stuff.</p>
<p>I noticed a peculiar trend during my first stream of <em>Bloodborne</em>. I had taken some melatonin, and I’d worked all day, so I was approaching sleep madness. I was therefore not playing the game very well. Furthermore, I knew nothing about the world of the game.</p>
<p>My stream chat was full of lovers of the game, here on the promise of my retweeted announcement that I was about to play the game for the first time. They all wanted to help me. I had dozens of people whispering advice at me.</p>
<p>The <em>Souls</em> games are experiences that players feel proud of figuring out. They’re mystery novels of mechanics and geography. You solve the games’ mysteries by moving, looking, and poking through the world.</p>
<p>In <em>Bloodborne</em>, The Players Are The Instruction Manual.</p>
<p>Ken Levine once said, of <em>BioShock</em> — a game whose human narrator is controlling the player character with psychic powers — that “The World Is The Best Narrator”. <em>Bloodborne</em>‘s world isn’t the narrator: the world is the story. As an alumnus of <em>Demon’s Souls</em> and a person who has (sorry: I’m about to brag) looked at some paintings before, I don’t go into an experience expecting a Hollywood narrative. Players are ecstatic to not need an expectation of Michael Bay’s “Transformers” or sitcom dialogue in <em>Bloodborne</em>. You are in a city that is experiencing an apocalypse. Every wall, window, and alley is part of that apocalypse.</p>
<p>In <em>Bloodborne</em>, the world is the story, and the player is the narrator. That’s why players feel so strongly about the experience; that’s why they want to help everyone out. As cheesy as it sounds, when you get through a hard moment in <em>Bloodborne</em> (or a <em>Souls</em> game), you own that moment, and you need to tell someone about it.</p>
<p>This is why <em>Demon’s Souls</em> invented its quirky, nigh-inscrutable hint system. Players can leave messages for future players. “Ambush ahead,” for example. Players can appraise one another’s messages as good or bad. Players can view “Specters” — flashes of previous players’ deaths. And every once in a while, you’ll see another player floating through your world as a white-outlined transparent ghost. This happens just infrequently enough that you’re likely to dismiss it as “just something that happens.” It’s not “just something that happens”: It’s something a team worked hard to put into a series of games. The message is clear, and weird: Someone else is experiencing the same thing you are; they are a ghost to you; you are a ghost to them.</p>
<p>Over months and years, <em>Souls</em> games unravel. Players learn everything they can. They share the information they can find, so that others might use that information to find more information. The in-game hint system is only a tiny example: The full story happens outside the game. It’s beautiful and strange.</p>
<p>Simon Parkin <a href="http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/mar/24/bloodborne-review-elegant-precise-irresistible">says in his review</a> that “the game is so relentlessly hostile that, when you happen upon a friendly character, who offers you encouragement, information or some kind of useful item, the sense of relief may bring you close to tears.”</p>
<p>To this, I’d add that when you combine the relentless hostility of the game with a glance at external conversation on the subject of the game, you wind up adopting curious behaviors and wondering weird questions. When the character who levels you up is an animated doll who speaks with a Russian accent and the merchants who sell you supplies are homunculi in a birdbath, you begin to fear even the game’s menus: I’m serious — I started to wonder if the game was remembering how many times I walked away from the merchant in order to sever the menu connection instead of choosing “leave” from the menu. What would the game do if I left too many times without saying goodbye? Would the merchant begin to raise the prices? Would some hidden number increase while some other hidden number decreased?</p>
<p><img alt height="363" src="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/dont-miss-how-bloodbornes-design-makes-players-the-experience-points.jpg" width="646"></p>
<p>All games have hidden numbers. <em>Bloodborne</em> and <em>Souls</em> games have a lot of fun with their hidden numbers. You can never be too careful.</p>
<p>Perhaps the most brilliant of the game’s hidden numbers is the length of the loading screen. The more you die, the longer it gets. It gets, in my estimation, one and a half seconds longer every single time you die. By the time you’re at the end of the game, the loading screen after you die is literally six minutes long. I love that the game thinks I don’t notice.</p>
<p>Maybe that’s just my imagination, though! <em>Bloodborne</em> enjoys it when you have an imagination.</p>
<p>(Here I could type ten thousand words about online multiplayer in <em>Souls</em> games. Let’s not let me distract myself. I’ll summarize: the multiplayer is exactly as weird as the game needs it to be.)</p>
<p>I have a friend who summarily dismisses the <em>Souls</em> games. He fancies himself a connoisseur of action video games. Every time a friend on Facebook or Twitter mentions one of the games, he jumps in, and says something along the lines of “I just can’t get into those games.” Why does he do this? Well, I can think of why I would do it, if I were the sort of person to do that.</p>
<p>I was once working on a game that had guns and a single, large, persistent environment in it. This was after <em>Demon’s Souls</em> had come out. I’d loved the game, and wanted more games like it. Our game was committed to having guns as the primary weapon. I loved this — here was an idea to breathe life back into the videogame gun. I didn’t want boring point-and-shooty guns. So I wrote up numerous guns — this was in a studio where my prototyping the guns myself would have been an act of treason — and I loved them all. I wanted there to just be four guns in the game. You choose one at the start, and then you have to find the other three. You can only switch guns at your house, in the hub world.</p>
<p>My favorite of the guns was a shotgun that you had to load. You pressed the X button on the Xbox controller to load the gun. “Loading” meant simply that you cocked the gun, with a good, loud click. You then pull the right trigger to shoot. That’s it.</p>
<p>Well, that’s not it: you can rack the gun more than once to inflate its barrel with bullets. It’d have been a high-fantasy kind of magic shotgun. Every time you rack the gun, it takes a little bit longer, and simultaneously increases the output power and spread of the blast. If an enemy hits you while you’re loading the gun, the pump status resets. I loved this idea, because our game would have been full of deadly monsters, and it would have featured a side-step mechanic.</p>
<p>Well, it turns out I was a dumb jerk who didn’t know how to sell an idea. No one would listen to my concepts. We made machine guns with ammo pick-ups, like every other game.</p>
<p>So I’m jealous that Hidetaka Miyazaki was smart enough and diplomatic enough to expedite his similar, weird, floppy, player-trusting mechanics and principles into the big, coherent mess that became the <em>Souls</em> series.</p>
<p>Every time a <em>Souls</em> game comes out, I play it. People <a href="http://twitter.com/108">tweet at me</a>, asking me to write a review. They ask me if I like the game series. People seem to really want to know if I like these games! It interests and amuses me that people want to know if I like the games. I feel loved, that people value my opinion on that level. <em>Souls</em> is a beloved game, that people want to make sure someone they like likes the thing they like. When a reader asks me if I like the <em>Souls</em> games, I can tell they’re doing something like feeling out the politics of a potential marriage partner.</p>
<p>So here it is: Yes, I love these games. I never talk about them because they make me jealous. They are exactly the sorts of games I’ve always wanted to design and direct.</p>
<p>I love the games for many of the reasons Aevee Bee mentions in her review. Aevee Bee <a href="http://www.thegia.com/2015/04/06/bloodborne-not-the-tourists-authentic-european-hellscape-vacation/">compares</a> the <em>Souls</em> games to Tsutomu Nihei’s surreal “place”-dense science fiction comic “Blame!”, which challenges the reader with inscrutability while confronting them with beauty. This challenge and confrontation finds its way into each of the <em>Souls</em> games’ design pillars.</p>
<p>To the invocation of Tsutomu Nihei, I’ll quote another Japanese artist — Emori Takeaki, a favorite musician of mine. Emori <a href="http://neojaponisme.com/2008/05/26/interview-with-emori-takeaki">once said this</a> of his band Citrus, and I feel that this belief exists inside the artistic principles behind the <em>Souls</em> games, as well:</p>
<p>“For example, the ‘clean’ music that plays at cafés, you can listen to that anywhere without having to spend any money. You can just go to someone’s room or watch it on YouTube. The full CDs will be all songs that have <em>that</em> sound, so listening to it in other places is quite enough for me. I don’t see any reason to spend money on that kind of music.</p>
<p>“Let’s say that there was a cute little three year-old girl walking over there. We would be like, ‘Oh, how cute.’ If you looked at her for five minutes straight, you’d get sick of it, right? Let’s say she was walking around with a metal yakitori skewer in her mouth. You would watch in a state of panic, for much longer than just five minutes. So I always emphasize the ‘danger’ in whatever I make. It’s the same with Citrus, yoga’n’ants or my graphic design. Cute and pretty things have a surprisingly short lifespan. Without something dangerous or scary, I don’t think you can really hook anybody in.”</p>
<p>In 2004, I predicted that, in 2014, music would be a set of sliders on a screen. We slide them up and down and around, selecting beats and tempos and keys and instruments, and our computer remembers what we like and when and why, and it fills our rooms and our life with sound that we already like or will like. With so much music in the world, how would you choose what to listen to? Why not listen to music that’s making itself in artificially intelligent interaction with your inputted declarations of taste? I suppose my half of an idea is to today’s Spotify what <em>Bloodborne</em> is to (for example) <em>Zelda</em>.</p>
<p>The <em>Souls</em> games are sloppy, beautiful, and full of slippery numbers. You can level up, though it’s not going to help you more than a little bit. This game is not going to let you sleepwalk to the end.</p>
<p>I believe the central question of this writing is: Why are these games popular now, at this exact moment? Part of it is the word-of-mouth trap: talking about a <em>Souls</em> game is both figuratively and literally part of the game. The dominant console game genres these days are big, talky, cinematic role-playing games, competition-heavy first-person shooters, or massively multiplayer online role-playing games. Some games are all of these at once.</p>
<p>A <em>Souls</em> game is none of these modern genres. Though it is a hand-crafted, deliberate, ornate piece of work, its narrative is yours to write; its mechanics are yours to sift through and discover; at the same time, its aesthetic is equal parts its own and yours to own via understanding. <em>Souls</em> games are every inch the product of the idea that games matter as expression because they require the player’s cooperation, permission, and education.</p>
<p>The tiara atop this game’s head is made of combat. No one plays a <em>Mario</em> game because Mario is a plumber. No one plays a <em>Mario</em> game because they hate turtles.</p>
<p>The Action is The Thing.</p>
<p>The tuning on the warm-ups and cooldowns of every action of every weapon is sublime. Adjustable and upgradeable as your character’s statistical numbers may be through expense of the currency the game’s dark atmosphere, twisty geometry, and mysterious meta-game air terrifies you of losing, though one weapon may have lower numbers than another, around the corner hides another number, containing another number. True understanding of the combat slides away from the player — despite all your opponents being simple drones repeating patterns against hard rules.</p>
<p>These games are popular now because people have learned to love the warm-ups and cooldowns in MOBAs (abilities) and FPSes (<em>Destiny</em>‘s grenades), so they expect warm-ups and cool-downs even in action games.</p>
<p>Heavier action games are coming.</p>
<p>… Of course, the action in <em>Bloodborne</em> would make a good deathmatch-only fighting game, though there’s really no beating that level design, that atmosphere, or that weird, huge meta-game.</p>
<p>Uh, I guess my answer to the question “What’s So Good About The <em>Souls</em> Games?” is “It’s The Everything.”</p>
<p>Maybe my initial bullet points were good enough.</p>
</div>


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