Interactive Narrative

  • 0.0
5 Weeks
$ 149

Brief Introduction

Learn how to use player choice and interactivity to create compelling game experiences

Description

The primary difference between video games and other art forms is interactivity. Players embody the characters in a game; instead of watching the protagonist make choices, they actively make choices for the player character.

For writers, choice takes on a different meaning in games that allow players to control the outcome of the plot. How do you ensure that game choices are meaningful, have consequences, and also don’t require an impossible amount of work for the game design team?

In this course we will explore how choice works in games, how branching plots work, and how to manage them with tools such as pinch points, bottlenecking and story silos. We’ll look at characters and dialogue, then get you authoring your own interactive narrative with commonly available online tools.

Verified learners will access additional game industry interviews, assignments and discussion topics, connecting with a community of other writers and game enthusiasts.

Knowledge

  • How choice in games differs from choice in other stories
  • How branching narrative affects gameplay
  • The use of stakes and consequences to make choices compelling
  • How to think about and tame branching plots
  • Explore different conversation systems and narrative generation tools
  • Experiment with branching narrative using common online tools.

Keywords

$ 149
English
Available now
5 Weeks
Peter Boychuk, Andrew Gray
UBCx
edX

Instructor

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Computer Courses