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Context Analysis / ImmersiveSim

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1!A brief timeline of the immersive sims
2According to [[http://www.blog.radiator.debacle.us/2017/10/the-second-death-of-immersive-sim-2007.html this article]], 2017 saw the folding of the first renaissance, or "second wave", of immersive sims. Indeed, the genre's history can be subdivided into two distinct waves.
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4The first wave consisted of the "classic immersive sims": ''VideoGame/UltimaUnderworld'', ''VideoGame/SystemShock'', ''VideoGame/{{Thief}}'', and ''VideoGame/DeusEx''. These were primarily created by Creator/LookingGlassStudios and Creator/IonStorm Austin, and their closures (in 2000 and 2005, respectively) are often cited as the cutoff point of the classic immersive sims (although Ion Storm's late titles ''Invisible War'' and ''Deadly Shadows'' are often contentious specimen). Most of the games in this period had been PC (mainly DOS and Windows) exclusives, which may be why some purists draw the line at the original ''Deus Ex'', after which the genre went MultiPlatform.
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6|| '''Title''' || '''Developer''' || '''Release date''' || '''Platforms''' ||
7||''VideoGame/UltimaUnderworld: The Stygian Abyss'' ||Creator/{{Looking Glass|Studios}} ||March 1992 ||PC ||
8||''Ultima Underworld II: Labyrinth of Worlds'' ||Looking Glass ||January 1993 ||PC ||
9||''VideoGame/SystemShock'' ||Looking Glass ||September 23, 1994 ||PC ||
10||''VideoGame/ThiefTheDarkProject'' ||Looking Glass ||November 30, 1998 ||PC ||
11||''System Shock 2'' ||Creator/{{Irrational|Games}} ||August 11, 1999 ||PC ||
12||''VideoGame/ThiefIITheMetalAge'' ||Looking Glass ||March 23, 2000 ||PC ||
13||''VideoGame/DeusEx'' ||Creator/IonStorm Austin ||June 17, 2000 ||PC ||
14||''VideoGame/ArxFatalis'' ||Creator/{{Arkane|Studios}} ||June 28, 2002 ||PC, Xbox ||
15||''VideoGame/DeusExInvisibleWar'' ||Ion Storm Austin ||December 2, 2003 ||PC, Xbox ||
16||''VideoGame/ThiefDeadlyShadows'' ||Ion Storm Austin ||May 25, 2004 ||PC, Xbox ||
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18Following the closure of Ion Storm, the genre went dormant for several years, although the break of creative continuity played a bigger role in it than the actual time gap (which was, in fact, shorter than the [[MediaNotes/WesternRPG dark ages]] between ''System Shock'' and ''Thief''). Ultimately, it was the first wave survivor Irrational who brought the genre back under the spotlight with the original ''VideoGame/BioShock1'', although it wasn't until the other survivor, Arkane, released the original ''VideoGame/{{Dishonored}}'' that people started talking about a genre comeback and the "modern immersive sims".
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20|| '''Title''' || '''Developer''' || '''Release date''' || '''Platforms''' ||
21||''VideoGame/BioShock1'' ||Irrational ||August 21, 2007 ||PC, Xbox 360, [=PS3=], Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
22||''VideoGame/BioShock2'' ||2K Marin ||February 9, 2010 ||PC, Xbox 360, [=PS3=], Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
23||''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'' ||Eidos Montreal ||August 23, 2011 ||PC, Xbox 360, [=PS3=], Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
24||''VideoGame/{{Dishonored}}'' ||Arkane ||October 9, 2012 ||PC, Xbox 360, [=PS3=], Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
25||''VideoGame/DeusExMankindDivided'' ||Eidos Montreal ||August 23, 2016 ||PC, Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
26||''VideoGame/Dishonored2'' ||Arkane ||November 11, 2016 ||PC, Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
27||''VideoGame/Prey2017'' ||Arkane ||May 5, 2017 ||PC, Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
28||''VideoGame/DishonoredDeathOfTheOutsider'' ||Arkane ||September 15, 2017 ||PC, Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
29||''VideoGame/UnderworldAscendant'' ||[=OtherSide=] ||November 15, 2018 ||PC, Xbox One, [=PS4=] ||
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31Unfortunately, the commercial failures of ''Mankind Divided'', ''Dishonored 2'', and ''Prey'', followed by the closure/rebranding of Irrational, Eidos' apparent abandonment of ''Deus Ex'', and Arkane wrapping up the "Kaldwin Era" arc of ''Dishonored'', meant that the second wave was effectively over by 2017, with only [=OtherSide=] still actively working on new entries in the genre, including ''System Shock 3''. The good news, however, is that while this specific genre has once more failed to root itself in the mainstream, the much broader notion of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SnpAAX9CkIc systemic gameplay]] appears to be on the rise across multiple genres.
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33!Immersive sim: A stew, not ''haute cuisine''
34As Creator/WarrenSpector explains [[http://www.pcgamer.com/the-designers-of-dishonored-bioshock-2-and-deus-ex-swap-stories-about-making-pcs-most-complex-games/ here]], the immersive sim design paradigm runs counter to the entire traditional wisdom of video game design: instead of coming up with an innovative or, at least, an entertaining core mechanic first, and then building content and secondary mechanics around it, immersive sims rely on the interplay of a large number of mechanics and subsystems, most of which are not integrated with each other until very late in development. Ricard Bare in the same article compares making an immersive sim to making a stew, where each ingredient tastes meh on its own but awesome in combination. To continue with the food metaphor, the traditional game design wisdom, exemplified by most games, from indie hits to quintessential Nintendo titles, would be the ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haute_cuisine haute cuisine]]'' of video games.
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36This distinction explains many of the difficulties historically faced by the genre. Because the stew only comes together as something delicious after every ingredient has been cut and mixed, producing an immersive sim takes a lot of time, during which no real assessment of the final product's quality can be made. This tends to discourage both (new) developers and the money-givers, who can neither focus-test, nor market the game until well into production. Marketing is also not helped any by the fact that immersive sims tend to hit too many bases genre-wise by design, [[AudienceAlienatingPremise confusing the target audiences as to what gameplay exactly they should expect from it]][[invoked]]. Last but not least, the emergent nature of the simulation requires a different type of thinking than what has been drilled into both gamers and designers by the mechanically focused games of the past decades: in the article, Spector recalls how utterly stumped ''Deus Ex'' playtesters were by the game expecting them to co-author their own experience.
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38Speaking of genre, the stew approach can also be observed in how many core [[MediaNotes/MechanicsDynamicsAesthetics MDA aesthetics]] (unique combinations of which define most genres)[[note]]Fun fact: Marc [=LeBlanc=] worked on most of Looking Glass' seminal titles prior to coming up with his "8 types of fun", which transformed into the gameplay aesthetics of MDA.[[/note]] the immersive sims target at once:
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40* '''Sensation''' is main-main aesthetic of immersive sim, which defines itself through immersing the player in a ''sense'' of place.
41* '''Fantasy''' is often just as important, especially in the 451 games, which put the player in the shoes of a powerful agent out to fix the screwed-up game world.
42* '''Challenge''' comes in the distinct problems-not-puzzles variety, where the player is told what to accomplish, but not how to do so.
43* '''Discovery''' is an obvious one, as the vast majority of the immersive sim gameplay concerns exploring the game world.
44* '''Expression''' is the express goal of giving players as much agency in the world as possible.
45* '''Narrative''' provides the crucial context for the player's actions, and the games also strive to let players co-author their {{emergent narrative}}s.
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47The only aesthetics that are not targeted by immersive sims are Fellowship and Competition, since the genre is traditionally a single-player experience (yet another reason for marketing-driven publishers to avoid it), as well as Submission, which is antithetical to most aesthetics the genre goes for (particularly Challenge and Expression).

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