Many serious games are most effective when played regularly; however, little is known about how individual game elements support player adherence over time. This work draws on evidence from existing frameworks and game design theories as well as from the design of casual games to investigate how individual game mechanics affect player attrition in a serious game. We implemented a math-learning game in which we could individually layer various game mechanics, and over the course of 3 weeks, 99 participants played one of six versions: Baseline, Rewards, Novelty, Completion, Waiting, or Blocking. We compared the game versions by analyzing the players’ performance as well as behaviour. Using survival analysis, we identified that the addition of Completion and Blocking mechanics facilitated the strongest sustained engagement. These findings are congruent with existing theories of player experience and promote the development of guidelines on designing for sustained engagement in serious games.
Serious Snacking: A Survival Analysis of how Snacking Mechanics Affect Attrition in a Mobile Serious Game
Dmitry Alexandrovsky,M. A. Friehs,Jendrik Grittner,Susanne Putze,M. Birk,R. Malaka,R. Mandryk
Published 2021 in International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
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- Publication year
2021
- Venue
International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
- Publication date
2021-05-06
- Fields of study
Computer Science
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