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As a developer and gamer, I usually get bored with some problems of designed games. Here is my list:

1) Games that cannot be paused;
2) Games without sound volume control;
3) Games with long opening videos but without a feature to skip the video (especially on RPGs);
4) Long games without "save states";
5) Games without key customization;

What's your list?

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This isn't really a programming question. – Martin Doms Jan 11 at 23:44
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why? a game developer isn't a programmer? – Click Ok Jan 11 at 23:47
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I can see it from the point of designing... – ccook Jan 11 at 23:49
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Surely this is programming related. Indie Game Development just started to gain momentum again, so teams with one Designer/Programmer and two Artists (Graphics and Sound) are on the rise again. XNA, WiiWare & Co. are a HUGE boost for the indie game dev business again. – Michael Stum Jan 12 at 0:04
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I don't see how its programming related. Its purely things that are annoying about games. If it was about programming problems/challenges in game design I could see a point. – Doug T. Jan 13 at 13:45
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27 Answers

vote up 26 vote down check

From a Programmers point of view:

  • How much Multithreading - While all new PCs are at least dual core, there is a HUGE existing installed base of Single Cores around. Take a look at the Steam survey and keep in mind that Steam users are generally more "high end" users already.
  • Pause functionality - usually not that hard to implement, but usually boring and mundane if it was an afterthought
  • Graphic Card Compatibility. Ahh yes, the glorious field of incompatibilities and manufacturers trying to "optimize" their drivers (aka. cheating).
  • Localization. Have fun with your hard-coded button sizes, as soon as the German Localization will need to change the "Minor Health Potion" to a "Schwachen Trank der Lebensenergie-Wiederherstellung", either you or the customer will suffer. (Luckily for the programmer, usually the customer suffers)

From a Gamer Point of view:

  • Renting Games instead of selling them. EA is a big offender here, with Red Alert 3, Spore and The Sims 3 not available for sale but only for a very expensive rent thanks to DRM.
  • Messing around in "My Documents". Dear Developers: Application Data belongs in %APPDATA%, not in my Documents. And that includes Savegames. Include a "Back Up Save Games" option in your games rather than filling My Documents with random crap.
  • Difficulty based on repetition. Hint: Difficulty does not mean that you have to die 5 million times in order to memorize the level. Very Skilled players should still be able to beat a level in their first try, yet you can still make it difficult.
  • Interrupting the game flow. I ranted about this already. Interrupting the game every 30 seconds for a modal dialog or cut scene does not add fun. Good Storytelling does not require interruption except possibly between large blocks of gameplay.
  • Quick Time Events. Aww, come on, QTEs may have some use, but even Resident Evil 4 and The Force Unleashed would have worked without.
  • Localization. I grew up in the C-64 era of largely untranslated games, but I also grew up with the German Lucasfilm Games Translation. The German Monkey Island is in my opinion still the pinnacle of good Localization. Sadly, (German) Localization Quality these days is not really good but just "Okay" usually. After seeing abysmal localizations like "Schw.Tr.d.Le.En.W." once too often, I only play in English nowadays. We need more Boris Schneider-Johne's in this business...
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Boris Schneider ftw! \o/ – Bombe Jan 12 at 0:10
I can live with a german translated button-text, but I can't stand the voiced "talents" that translates voice-overs. These guys have ruined more than one game simply due to translation. To bad you can't always buy non-localized games in germany. – Nils Pipenbrinck Jan 12 at 2:00
Oh yes, Voice-Overs, I completely forgot those (well, actually I tried as much as possible to forget them). Getting good and motivated(!) Voice Talent is really hard and also expensive, but usually worth it (Irony: Gears of War 1 had an excellent German Voice Over, but was not released in Germany) – Michael Stum Jan 12 at 2:49
All your bases belong to us? – Uri Jan 12 at 3:01
"Schwachen Trank der Lebensenergie-Wiederherstellung" – surely your're joking. What about "Schwacher Heiltrank?" … I know, I know, I completely missed the whole point. :-D nicht hauen! Gothic II actually had quite a lot of glitches going in that direction. – Konrad Rudolph Jan 26 at 18:44
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vote up 6 vote down

When license validation fails...

On that note: why has noone developed an optical mouse that can read the barcodes on the product keys??? I mean seriously. Often the mouse and keyboard are bundled, so how hard would it be to have your mouse scan the bar code, and input the text. Just annoys me every time, (I've memorized my windows keys).

Ohh, and having to back track.

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Games that insist on making you play through the tutorial, even though you might have already played it. (I remember Black and White annoying me a lot with this).

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Hahah i remember that. Throwing the rocks and all – ccook Jan 11 at 23:39
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That was such a PITA. I'd completely blocked it out of my mind. – Esteban Brenes Jan 19 at 16:13
My PC at the time could barely handle the game. I remember spending hours trying to get the rocks thrown in the right direction only to have the game miss my mouse movements and just drop it. – T Pops Jun 9 at 19:36
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Games with cutscenes I can't skip drive me crazy. What's worse is when the cutscenes contain crucial information that you don't learn anywhere else in the game when skipped.

The least painful cutscenes I've ever dealt with are the interactive integrated ones in Half Life.

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Whole buckets of yes! This was THE reason I stopped playing Assassins Creed. Also just as annoying: The little intro "Logo" clips that play every.time.you.start.the.game! Especially when they have to fit in one from the publisher, the developer, the graphics card maker, the cpu maker, the guys who built the engine, the digital distribution service, the guy who did the "grunt when you get shot" sound... I swear, even if they're skippable (which too frequently they're not) it takes 6 or 7 times bashing the escape key to get to a menu! Unacceptable! – Toji Nov 23 at 14:37
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In this order:

  1. "important" Bugs (such as not viewing building in warcraftIII)
  2. Lag (When it lags, it's just not fun anymore)
  3. No history / Bad history (I don't like to play a game for playing a game.. I like when there's a good storyline)
  4. As the author said, I hate not being able to stop the cinematic.. especially if it`s the second time I see it!
  5. Automatic view control screwning the game play.. like in "Mario galaxy".. where sometime you run and "paf" the view changes for no reason and you get killed.
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Great! I liked specially of the 2 and 3. – Click Ok Jan 11 at 23:42
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Games with unclear objectives, leaving you running around aimlessly at the beginning of the game.

If a game requires an "objectives list" its a bit of a "code smell" indicating that their actual design needs work. Voice overs or "guide characters" are one step up from this, but still probably indicates your game is overly complicated, or not very clear.

Use colour, lighting and clear visual and audio indicators to guide players to their objectives. Team Fotress 2 uses colour cueues and well defined character silhouettes to make it easy to identify where objectives lie. Left 4 Dead uses minimal, but strong lighting cueues to indicate the direction the player should travel ("go towards the light").

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vote up 6 vote down
  1. 'Reload until you get it right' level of difficulty for any task.
  2. DRM that interferes in any way with legitimate use.
  3. Save points (rather than save-at-will).
  4. Forcing me to sit and watch anything.
  5. Implying that any starting ability is fit for a particular purpose, when as an advanced player you will find it useless.
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I like save points, I find they make me not so save happy every time I move into a new area, I just have to suck it up and go. – Nathan W Jan 12 at 0:14
Agreed, difficulty, lives and other concepts games used to have were good, and created challenge. Not that I play them all, but if failure has no consequences, where is the tension, need to improve ... – mike g Jan 12 at 3:03
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@mike Agreed, otherwise it ends up like this: Move into room a bit->save->kill some stuff->move to next area->save->try and kill some stuff->die->revert to last save(it's ok I haven't lost much work) = no tension, no consequences. – Nathan W Jan 12 at 3:08
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Save points, like lack of pause, assume that you always have absolutely nothing to do with your life other than play the game. This was fine when I was 12. It's not fine now. – chaos Jan 12 at 3:22
@chaos, I know where you are coming from. I quite liked rainbow six style of saving on Xbox(not sure about PC version) but you had 3 saves to start with and if you used them all up at the start of the level well no more saves for you till you finish that level. – Nathan W Jan 12 at 3:26
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Another one for your list. Games that are not easily localizable or dont allow for easy adaptation to non-US keyboards and input methods.

Developers really need to understand how to create global products upfront and not after they have finished the English version when it's usually too late.

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vote up 8 vote down

Check out the Twinkie Denial Condition Database. I suggest reading all of the columns, including the newer ones which that page doesn't link to.

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Excellent compilation! I wish that I can accept two answers as correct. :-) – Click Ok Jan 12 at 2:29
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Speaking as a gamer:

Other than those already listed:

Depth - older games that I enjoy often pay a lot of attention to detail that seems lacking in the newer games (especially the newer rpgs). Also, randomly generated exploratory zones which are just rehashes of a few texture base with no uniqueness is boring.

Voice - Understandable due to budget concerns, but at least hire someone that doesn't sound like they are reading from a phone book.

Character Impact - a hero that saves the world should at least leave some form of impact on the world in npc interactions or such.

AI - Alien #1 rushes at you blindly, you blow his head off. Alien #2 does the same.... repeat for every alien you meet. Sooner or later you'd think they would learn to dodge or something? Throwing quantity does not solve this problem especially when pared with...

Toning down stuff - Already discussed briefly, but DO NOT TONE DOWN DIFFICULT GAMING CONCEPTS TOO MUCH. When you dumb down things too much, you alienate some gamers seeking a challenge. Simply throwing in more HP/Damage on enemies does not solve this problem, it just detracts from the realism of the game when you have to empty half your arsenal to kill 1 grunt.

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vote up 3 vote down

I would say that the worst problem in game design is the need to "stretch" the game to meet some metric of "not being too short" and thus a waste of money. In order to accomplish that, designers ramp up the difficulty, add side missions, remove save points, etc.

Unfortunately, no matter how much you "stretch" a game, an X amount of content and novelty would only get you this far.

What ends up happening is that there are so many games coming out, that enough people will abandon your game once it becomes repetitive.

This has happened to games like Assassin's Creed that was supposed to be a great new thing, and everyone complained that was too repetitive. I admit that I eventually skipped most of the side quests in Mass Effect when they added very little. I was getting very annoyed with Bioshock towards the end. I also left GTA4 very early though at least there each side mission has a lot of humor and banter. I am probably close to my breaking point with FAllout 3.

I'd rather enjoy every minute of a 10-hour game (Halo 3), than spend 50-hours doing the same thing over and over again with different textures, especially as enemies become stronger while my weaponry becomes stronger.

In addition, if you're looking for specific annoying thingS: - Game without subtitles are bad. Games without option of skipping (and repeating) speech sequences are bad. Games where you can't skip the speech and every answer is like listening to John Kerry are also bad.

  • Too much stuff to pick and no convenient ways of "auto picking" everything on the screen. This happens with games like Fallout a lot. I spend half the time feeling like someone picking up trash on the side of the highway looking for what is a good skill book among tons of ruined boosk, for example.

  • An AI that is still to freaking dumb or that can be easily brought into dumb states.

  • "Nonlinear" games with a lot of side missions where there was an expectation of a certain order to said missions. Fallout 3 is case in point. Since it is fairly random when you encounter side-quests and locations, you can very easily end up in places that are above your skill level (frustrating), or way below your skill level (frustrating).

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FWIW, scavenging has always seemed like a thematic and appropriate part of the Fallout series (and Wasteland) to me. Picking through the ruins of civilization? Well, yeah. – chaos Jan 12 at 15:17
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By the way, this is not really a design issue but a recent peeve (and a funny one): lingerie.

Too many games seem to find an excuse to represent women in lingerie. Fallout 3 is just one recent example, but this was in Bioshock, mass effect, etc.

Now don't get me wrong, I don't mind seeing it in the appropriate context in real life...

However, unless your character model has enough polygons to warrant said apparel (e.g., Tomb Raider), just skip it. Otherwise, from quite a few angles it looks either horrible or extremely funny once the texture is mapped.

If your character's cleavage appears on her right shoulder, then there is a problem.

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vote up 9 vote down

Not sure if these are really design problems - more like implementation problems.

  • Alt tab broken / working poorly
  • No multiple monitor support (some games even crash)
  • Saving takes too long (Seriously, why not instantly? How long does writing 100KB of data take?)
  • Poor support for non-QWERTY keyboards (Fable would always crash at one point with a Dvorak layout, regardless of the custom control settings.)
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Re: saving - often that 100Kb of data does not exist anywhere in a nice 100Kb chunk. :) You need to traverse various structures to extract it, and then convert it to a serialisable format before writing. – Kylotan Jan 21 at 17:43
The fact that Crysis takes about a second to save and load says something... +1 For all of these points. Pretty much every 3D game has these problems. – Longpoke Nov 23 at 13:52
+1 for non-qwerty keyboard support. I'm a colemak user and this pisses me. – Trillian Nov 23 at 14:56
Half-life had saving right. It just auto-saved for you. Fast, so it didn't interrupt gameplay. And frequently, just before every area you might die. No "oops I'm going to have to redo the whole level because I forgot to save" moments; and no need for the "quick-save twitch" of pressing the save after every room (which develops when you've had too many oops moments). – user9876 Nov 23 at 15:02
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Games that require fifty hours of gameplay to reach some sense of completion or closure.

(And now, a big shout-out to Portal, a great short game that's worth more than ten long ones.)

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I find that lack of keyboard support, i.e. having to use the mouse all the time represents a serious problem in game design, as indeed it does in any software design.

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  • Non interruptable movies (intro's of all EA games...)
  • Intro menu of games being 'slow' due all the graphical effects. GTA4 screen is white with 4 options, after that 2 youtube movies appear. C&C3 slow sliding buttons.
  • Movies with crucial information. I prefer reading what to do instead of listening and forgetting when I try the game again in a few days/weeks.
  • Focus of the game more at the 'wow' factor than at the playability.
  • Savepoints instead of save when you want.
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vote up 4 vote down

My list of problems with games?

OK, downvote away ...

  • The preponderence of combat games, encouraging a generation of "gamers" worldwide who think combat is fun.

Maybe it's a function of age. I remember when "freedom fighters" were laying waste to Nicaraguan civilians. The CIA assasinated Salvador Allende, democratically elected president of Chile. Numerous wars going back centuries, which were only possible because of a supply of people, mostly young men, each thinking they are immortal, each fervently wishing for a "cause" in which to exercise their hubris and their trigger-fingers.

These games always put you (the "good guy") in the role of shooter, seldom the "shootee", merely having instant non-elective surgery done to randomly selected parts of your anatomy, or merely paralyzing the lower half of your body for the remaining 60 years of your life, or putting your temporary friends in temporary agony.

Ask someone who's been in combat if combat is fun. They change the subject, because they don't want to talk about it, and if you haven't experienced it, there's no way you can begin to understand.

Sometimes combat is necessary, but never fun.

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When I was young, before video games (and dinosaurs), we played soldiers in the back yard. Combat-oriented games are nothing new. – David Thornley Jan 26 at 19:50
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Yeah I know - so did I, post WW2. We had sticks for guns - would say "bang, you're dead". Now you chopper-in and napalm villages, blow away cops & robbers alike, spill simulated blood, into your forties. That's progress, I guess. – Mike Dunlavey Jan 27 at 12:50
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Another is behavioral composition problems. Often in games, behaviors are applied to objects to make them do stuff - like wander, shoot, etc. It gets hard when these behaviors need to interact with each other. It becomes a explosion of interactions that is impossible to predict up front because all the behaviors don't exist yet.

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vote up 3 vote down

Not enough missions. (I'm looking at YOU, Unreal 2.) Even if the visuals and gameplay are great, I still feel ripped off when I'm able to finish a game in a single weekend. Maybe everything just seems short after Half-Life ...

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vote up 2 vote down

Too much overhead when starting or leaving the game. This includes the "too many movies" thing - yeah, I'm sure they get money for showing adverts for hardware companies, but I paid for the damn game so I don't want to see them, thanks.

But also when quitting - Assassin's Creed is the worst offender I've seen for this. I bring up a menu and choose "quit", then have to do the same again from the metagame. Then I'm taken back to the front screen, where I have to select my "user" before I can quit. If I want to quit, it's because I've got something else I want or need to do - cat needs feeding, dinner is on fire, etc. I don't want to be slowed down at this point. You should only be allowed up to 3 button presses for this - it's not hard.

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vote up 1 vote down

I hate games that get crazy difficult as you go on. There are so many games where I have just enjoyed the first few levels and just left it after that cause it got so tough. Playing games is about having fun, and repeatedly dying or getting stuck in a level is not fun at all.

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vote up 3 vote down

Consider the non-game parts of the user interface as well, because most game developers do not!

  • Dialog boxes should be used sparingly, and should appear instantly! Far too many games have fancy dialog boxes that scroll lazily into view and then don't actually let you choose any options for another half-second.
  • Think about the workflow of the user who is using your application, um I mean, playing your game. I don't need/want to save my progress if I choose a New Song in Quick Play in Rock Band (what progress?). If someone doesn't care what name is listed in the high score list, don't force them to type AAA! Don't force the user to create a profile on first game launch, what if they just want to check the patch version or change video settings?
  • Use loading times intelligently. Why can't you start preloading the new level while you're waiting for me to kit-out my character, or even while displaying the stats after I finished the previous level?
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vote up 2 vote down

Forgetting that FUN comes FIRST. That's it in a nutshell. All the other complaints are just symptoms of the forgetting to make the game fun first.

Examples:

AIs that get "harder" by ganging up on the human player. If you are writing your AI to defeat the human rather than to defeat the other "opponents" you are doing it wrong because while opposing the player is easier once you get ganged up on, the game ceases being fun.

Whiz-bang eye-candy with no substance.

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vote up 0 vote down

Not enough standardization in design practices. It is hard to to be a freelance designer because every company has a different opinion about what design entails and how it should be formatted. I think game designers, in some regards, should learn from film script writers.

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Useless, shiny, unintuitive menus. I especially love menus that use Direct3D / OpenGL etc so if you mess up the graphics you can't go in and change them.

Also blocking socket calls in the GUI event loop are just awesome.

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vote up 0 vote down

Incredible difficult last level (last boss-fight etc.). For some reasons, game designers simply don't want me to finish their games (after spending many hours coming that far). Of course it should be a challenge, but in some games, it's way more difficult than anything before.

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Most of my big gripes have been addressed here, but I've had another one for a while that I didn't see come up: Games that support gamepads/joysticks/what-have-you on only some of their screens. I love it when I can use a 360 pad for my PC games, especially platformers or the like, but when I have to drop the controller and grab the keyboard and mouse to navigate menus because the developer didn't feel it was important to support the gamepad for anything but the core gameplay mode, that gets to be real aggravating REALLY fast. (Audiosurf is a wonderful game, but is incredibly guilty of this, especially because the game forces you into a menu every five minutes or so!)

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