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Death Timer. Why games punish failure and which penalties make you stronger
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- Nombre de pages184
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-23596-4
- EAN9783565235964
- Date de parution10/02/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille936 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
You died. Again. The screen fades, the counter ticks, and you are back at the checkpoint, minus experience, minus gold, minus twenty minutes of progress. Game designers call this the death penalty. Players call it frustrating. But both groups know it works.
This book explores the psychology and design philosophy behind death penalties in video games. From the brutal corpse runs of early MMOs to the forgiving checkpoints of modern platformers, you will understand why different games punish failure differently and what that teaches players.
The Death Timer examines the spectrum from permadeath roguelikes to consequence-free sandbox games.
You will learn why Dark Souls made its reputation on punishment, why some players love losing everything, and why the trend toward easier respawns might be making games less memorable. Whether you design games or just play them, understanding the penalty system reveals what a game is really trying to teach you.
You will learn why Dark Souls made its reputation on punishment, why some players love losing everything, and why the trend toward easier respawns might be making games less memorable. Whether you design games or just play them, understanding the penalty system reveals what a game is really trying to teach you.



