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How to Design Your iOS Game to Grow: Learning from the Style of Tiger Style
 
 
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arrow Postmortem: Sony Bend Studio's Uncharted: Golden Abyss [1]
 
arrow Is Game Music All It Can Be? [31]
 
arrow The End of the Journey: One Indie Studio's Tale [21]
 
arrow The Tip of the Iceberg: Storytelling and Reactive Design in Canabalt and Capsule [4]
 
arrow The Tightrope Walk: Hitman Absolution, Freedom, and Realism [8]
 
arrow How to Design Your iOS Game to Grow: Learning from the Style of Tiger Style [5]
 
arrow Postmortem: Humble Hearts' Dust: An Elysian Tail [16]
 
arrow An Assassin's Revolution [3]
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Six words about role-playing games [35]
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  How to Design Your iOS Game to Grow: Learning from the Style of Tiger Style
by Wagner James Au [Design, Indie, Smartphone/Tablet]
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November 1, 2012 Article Start Page 1 of 3 Next
 

In this excerpt from Game Design Secrets by Wagner James Au, Randy Smith from Tiger Style (Spider: The Secret of Bryce Manor and Waking Mars) shares the story of how he and David Kalina built a successful mobile game studio by adapting some of the core principles of great core game design and translating them to the iOS. In the process, they show how you can create thoughtful, artful, genre-defying games for Apple's platform and do quite well. The book is now available in paperback and e-book (use code "GDS12″ for a 40 percent discount at checkout).

Spider and Waking Mars: Quirky, Low Budget iOS Games With Impressive Sales



In Spider, you play an arachnid, jumping and spinning your way through an empty mansion with the flick of your finger, discovering the mysteries of the family who once lived there along the way. As of mid-2012, the game has sold more than 360,000 copies and grossed more than $1,000,000. (Spider still earns more than $5,000 in a good month.)

In Waking Mars, you play a lone, stranded space explorer with a jetpack, lost in the caverns of Mars recently discovered to be full of life -- specifically, a living, breathing ecosystem of alien life forms. Mars, which launched in March 2012, has so far sold over 55,000 copies, grossing more than $240,000.

"Both games have a long tail," Smith notes to me, referring to their small but steady sales months or even years after launch, "and as of this writing Waking Mars is still in the beginning of its sales lifetime."

The sales numbers are even more impressive when you consider how much these games took to produce: Smith estimates it cost $15,000 to develop Spider and $38,000 for Waking Mars. This is possible because Tiger Style doesn't really have an office or investors, and operates, as he puts it, with a business model that's "more like a film production company or a cooperative, perhaps."

How Tiger Style Budgets and Produces Their Games

Spider's $15,000 budget includes the purchase of all equipment, licenses, and legal support. It also includes $10,000 in royalty advances paid to the team. That sum, however, doesn't include any salaries or benefits. For example, during its eight months of development, Smith lived off of his own money.

"We're all essentially unpaid contractors during a project; then we all collect lifetime royalties when the game is released," says Smith. On top of that fact, consider that Tiger Style is a distributed company without an office; the company employees work over the internet, and the company doesn't have investors. That's about as low of an overhead as companies can get.

Waking Mars operated under the same model. It was a two-year development cycle that was supported by the income of Spider, according to Smith. They paid out $38,000 in advance royalties and about another $5,000 in other expenses. He and co-owner Kalina lived off the income from Spider during the two-year development of Waking Mars. (While they were developing Spider, they lived off their savings.) Now they're living off of Spider plus Waking Mars' income to develop their next projects.

"The rest of the team is more like a film production company," says Smith. "They are contractors who work with us when we have projects for them to work on and find other income the rest of the time. We provide royalty advances to those who need it during production."

Promoting Tiger Style Games with Social Media

Social media is an integral part to promoting Tiger Style's games. According to Smith, the trailers for both Spider and Waking Mars (posted to YouTube) were key instruments in selling the games to players who had heard of them but wanted to see more before spending their money. "We consider the trailer to be the single most important piece of promotion that we can do," says Smith. "We choose to show gameplay footage while also communicating the fantasy and story that was being offered."

For social network promotion, Spider had a feature that let you brag on Facebook that you were playing it or that you solved one of its quests. (The adoption rate of that feature was 11 percent.) Waking Mars did something similar, allowing you to Tweet to your friends back on Earth when you had completed research on one of the Martian species.

Fewer people Tweeted from Mars than Facebooked from Spider, which Smith attributes to implementation. "The Mars Tweets were also a bit more mysterious," says Smith. "Sharing with your friends that you just solved a mystery in a video game is probably an easier sell than posting something cryptic like [a Waking Mars Tweet] 'Larians prefer to eat mobile life forms but are also able to derive some nutritional value from Zoa seeds.'"

 
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Comments

Andy Wallace
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The slides at the end do a really amazing job of encapsulating how Spider feels. It's a prime example of articulating what a game will be without actually investing in any art or prototyping.

Michael Joseph
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The market seems like it's in such a funk that it'd buy anything that seemed sufficiently different and unique.

I'm not taking anything away from Spider or Mars. I haven't played either of them. But a game about being a spider isn't something you hear about everyday.

Joe Wreschnig
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One of the things that makes Spider remarkable is that really it's not at all *about* being a spider. In some elements it presages Frog Fractions, though it's less manic. (But it's still also a good arcade game in which you are a spider.)

The game is also over three years old, and not really associated with a "funk" period in mobile development or game development generally.

Yama Habib
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"For social network promotion, Spider had a feature that let you brag on Facebook that you were playing it or that you solved one of its quests. (The adoption rate of that feature was 11 percent.) Waking Mars did something similar, allowing you to Tweet to your friends back on Earth when you had completed research on one of the Martian species."

How does one make the most of integrating social media into a game without annoying the players who don't want to share their experiences via facebook or twitter? 11 percent of my players tweeting/facebooking about my game doesn't seem worthwhile if even one reviewer slams the game for pestering the player with social media prompts. Is there a way to ensure that players who hate those kinds of prompts will never see them while still making it seamless for those who like them to use them?

Chuck Bartholomew
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Probably the best balance solution to this would be something like this:
1) Don't bug the player during the beginning portion of the game - the "evaluation" period, so to speak. You don't want to give the impression that this game is about spamming your friends on social networking sites.
2) Once the player has gotten far enough into the game to decide if they love it, introduce the option of bragging to their friends about their achievements in-game. Give them an option to always brag, never brag, or be prompted each time.
This puts the choice in the hands of the player, which is where it belongs. No one would fault a game for offering the option of social media integration so long as its offered in a way that respects the player's ability to choose.


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