Can be modified for monetization or retention A few months back two patent applications submitted to the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Electronic Arts surfaced online. Both of these patents were filed on March 8, 2016 and dealt with dynamically altering the player experience. One of the patents dealt with dynamically changing the […]
Not quite the same, albeit that's because this thread's title is somewhat simplified.
That thread discussed the concept of dynamic difficulty as a potential returning feature in Madden. It previously existed in Madden NFL 09 and acted by silently adjusting gameplay sliders in the background as you succeeded or failed against the CPU.
This thread is discussing a technology for which EA has applied for a patent. With this technology, EA would (in any of its games, not just Madden) facilitate matchmaking in multiplayer games (or adjust settings in single-player games in reaction to user actions) in order to increase metrics such as playtime, retention, or spending. The technology could be used, for example, to reduce the difficulty of a hard boss following many failed attempts to ensure the user defeats the boss and keeps playing the game, thus increasing user retention. Dynamic difficulty in Madden 09 could be considered an extremely simplified version of this idea. The obvious concern - and what I think OP wants to allude to - is using technology such as this to encourage micro transactions, which have been under much scrutiny from games media over the past calendar year (especially following Star Wars Battlefront II).
This patent is somewhat related to a similar patent application Activision-Blizzard filed recently, where in their games technology would exist to match-make users in multiplayer games dependent on micro transaction purchases. The example given was matching a junior Call Of Duty player who wished to become a great sniper with a more skilled player who had spent money on many sniper-related microtransactions. The idea in this example, of course, is to encourage the junior player to make those micro transaction payments.
Both EA and Activision have stated that neither of their respective patented technologies have been deployed in any released titles.
Not quite the same, albeit that's because this thread's title is somewhat simplified.
That thread discussed the concept of dynamic difficulty as a potential returning feature in Madden. It previously existed in Madden NFL 09 and acted by silently adjusting gameplay sliders in the background as you succeeded or failed against the CPU.
This thread is discussing a technology for which EA has applied for a patent. With this technology, EA would (in any of its games, not just Madden) facilitate matchmaking in multiplayer games (or adjust settings in single-player games in reaction to user actions) in order to increase metrics such as playtime, retention, or spending. The technology could be used, for example, to reduce the difficulty of a hard boss following many failed attempts to ensure the user defeats the boss and keeps playing the game, thus increasing user retention. Dynamic difficulty in Madden 09 could be considered an extremely simplified version of this idea. The obvious concern - and what I think OP wants to allude to - is using technology such as this to encourage micro transactions, which have been under much scrutiny from games media over the past calendar year (especially following Star Wars Battlefront II).
This patent is somewhat related to a similar patent application Activision-Blizzard filed recently, where in their games technology would exist to match-make users in multiplayer games dependent on micro transaction purchases. The example given was matching a junior Call Of Duty player who wished to become a great sniper with a more skilled player who had spent money on many sniper-related microtransactions. The idea in this example, of course, is to encourage the junior player to make those micro transaction payments.
Both EA and Activision have stated that neither of their respective patented technologies have been deployed in any released titles.
Excellent. Thank you for the information..I recall researching that a couple months ago.. I agree with the position that there is no DDS in Madden..
I do like the concept. I also noted that the findings from the research by EA showed no significant effect on monetization. So the idea of creating a more difficult system to sell player cards would not be the key driver. The purpose would be to implement a game which people wanted to play for more than a few weeks..
Not quite the same, albeit that's because this thread's title is somewhat simplified.
That thread discussed the concept of dynamic difficulty as a potential returning feature in Madden. It previously existed in Madden NFL 09 and acted by silently adjusting gameplay sliders in the background as you succeeded or failed against the CPU.
This thread is discussing a technology for which EA has applied for a patent. With this technology, EA would (in any of its games, not just Madden) facilitate matchmaking in multiplayer games (or adjust settings in single-player games in reaction to user actions) in order to increase metrics such as playtime, retention, or spending. The technology could be used, for example, to reduce the difficulty of a hard boss following many failed attempts to ensure the user defeats the boss and keeps playing the game, thus increasing user retention. Dynamic difficulty in Madden 09 could be considered an extremely simplified version of this idea. The obvious concern - and what I think OP wants to allude to - is using technology such as this to encourage micro transactions, which have been under much scrutiny from games media over the past calendar year (especially following Star Wars Battlefront II).
This patent is somewhat related to a similar patent application Activision-Blizzard filed recently, where in their games technology would exist to match-make users in multiplayer games dependent on micro transaction purchases. The example given was matching a junior Call Of Duty player who wished to become a great sniper with a more skilled player who had spent money on many sniper-related microtransactions. The idea in this example, of course, is to encourage the junior player to make those micro transaction payments.
Both EA and Activision have stated that neither of their respective patented technologies have been deployed in any released titles.
Pay to win basically? (not meaning in Madden; the sniper thing you spoke of)
Originally posted by Therebelyell626
I am going to create a team called "the happy town fundament rapscallions" and hurt your already diminishing image
Not necessarily. The DLC could be sniper-related cosmetics like gun skins, character skins, themed character customization items, or whatever.
That said, this tech certainly could be used to promote pay-to-win but most any game designer with a pulse knows to avoid that.
The only things Madden has any moral right to make pay-for DLC are things not in the NFL now. For example, unlocking custom uniforms for created teams. MUT cosmetic content unrelated to winning/losing. That sort of thing.
That's an opinion, obviously. But the only game with the NFL license has an moral obligation to replicate the NFL and make that the base product. Morality obviously means sh4t in business. But that is why our society is rotten in its core /endofftopic.
Originally posted by Therebelyell626
I am going to create a team called "the happy town fundament rapscallions" and hurt your already diminishing image
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