As yinglet composer who seeks out a unique style for ze yinglets wizhin classical music or... generally yinglet music >v< I test out which instrument can yinglets use despite ze size and anatomy. Im playing one of my works.

The video itself showed off some stats that were somewhat interesting, like the survey found completion was the strongest motivator overall. The video then asked the question "is this because people are fundamentally motivated this way, or is it just because games are designed to encourage and reward completion specifically?" And then proceeded to.... Not answer the question.

Show thread

I would argue that the idea that someone can be driven by one specific core motivation is fundamentally flawed, because even though I would say I'm someone who likes 100%ing a game, I have only ever reached 100% in a tiny proportion of the games I've played.

(continued...)

Show thread

- "whether or not I like something depends on the game - e.g. with collecting all the things: in a platformer where that's the entire point? Absolutely! But in an open world game if there's 500 feathers hidden in random places and the only reward for collecting them all is an achievement? I don't care, I'm ignoring the feathers" - this is the point I noticed yesterday. It's hard to identify a single motivation when I play a variety of games for completely different reasons.

(continued...)

Show thread

- "it's missing questions about FEELINGS and emotional responses. E.g. I play horror games to feel scared, I play cozy games to feel happy, etc" - I couldn't figure this out yesterday but I fully agree - there's no space in the quiz for gamers who are motivated by the game making them feel an emotion. And as people pointed out, that is a commonly accepted motivation for engaging with movies and shows! So why isn't it in their quiz?

(continued...)

Show thread

But today, I found a video about the quiz, and while the video itself was not good (it was full of weird pseudoscience and bad statistics), the comments had some good insights:
- "It's the Myers Briggs test but for gamers" - I agree 100%. It has the same flaws and the same fundamental issues. However, I think it does get a small amount of credit for being focused on motivations rather than just "this is a fundamental identity truth".

(continued...)

Show thread

Yesterday I found this "gamer motivations" quiz, which supposedly identifies what motivates you as a gamer™ (e.g. collecting all the things, competing against others, immersion in a fantasy world, etc).
When I did the quiz, I thought a few things were off, but I couldn't really put them into words.

Here is the quiz, in case you want to try it: apps.quanticfoundry.com/survey

(continued...)

Saw some art of characters kissing earlier today and ough.... I miss kissing so much...

Show older
Computer Fairies

Computer Fairies is a Mastodon instance that aims to be as queer, friendly and furry as possible. We welcome all kinds of computer fairies!