Ex GTA 6 dev says free and live service games are "eating everyone's time," and combined with "open world fatigue," it's getting harder to make players explore

Red Dead Redemption screenshot of protagonist John Marston aiming a pistol
(Image credit: Rockstar)

Have you ever started an 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:open-world game, opened the map, and felt your shoulders sink as you realize just how much there is to do? Me too. At a recent GDC talk, former 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:GTA 6 and 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Red Dead Online developer Cameron Williams explains some of the p🅺roblems with moder🍨n open worlds.

"Players just don't explore, right?" Williams says in a GDC talk reported by . "Whether that's because you have a super action-oriented game or because they just simply aren't compelled. Or, [your game has] a huge time investment and it's hard for players to pick up and put down, which is an increasing challenge, especially with the sort of evolving ecosystem of free-to-play and live service games𓃲🌟 that are kind of eating everyone's time and attention."

I can't both fully explore and immerse myself in an open world and keep up with the onslaught of video game releases, I have to pick one or the other. Either I'm spending a month on one or two games, or I'm completing them as they come ou🍃t, mostly mainlining the core story and ignoring side missions and optional activities. I certainly couldn't keep up with new games while also grinding out a live-service title.

Williams calls this "open world fatigue" and says it makes us less likely to explore. Rather than wꦜandering off the beaten path, we just hop from mission to mission and then put the game down once the credits roll for the first time.

There's also something Williams calls "analysis paralysis." If there are too many visible landmarks on a map, all potentially offering us something interesting, we freeze because we don't know where to go next. When I think about a game like Assassin's Creed Unity and its endless i𒅌cons and viewpoints to climb, I remember how hard it was to get myself to actually explore rather than just going wherever the story told me to go.

Red Dead Redemption 2

(Image credit: Rockstar)

"We want to avoid creating a possibility space so large that players simply just don't know what toജ choose," Williams sayꦓs. Williams cites that shows people are less likely to buy jam in a supermarket if there are 24 options to choose from compared to just six.

I think we've found the solution to that, though. Games like 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Breath of the Wild, 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Elden Ring, and even 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Red Dead Redemption 2ꦆ offer huge open worlds but they don't bombard you with icons and points of interest. Elden Ring lets you explore however you want and just offers interesting landmarks you can spot and inv𒅌estigate at your leisure, as does Breath of the Wild – whereas Red Dead Redemption 2 often only highlights stranger missions and other optional activities when you get close to them.

I'm currently replaying the 🌟cowboy game and loving just wandering around aimlessly, but I couldn't do this on a first playthrough, and I know that engaging with the game this way means I won't play as many new ones. But I like living off the land as an outlaw, so I'm going to keep pla꧋ying that way.

Williams has a nice anecdote about Red Dead's design and how it encourages us to try new things and not just rush the story. During an early main mission, you go fishing with young Jack, "and the mission essentially showcases the best possible version of fishing by having companions react to the player's fishing skills, and they create opportunities to explain some of the systems in very natural ways," WIlliams says. "It actually enhances the fishing system with context and meaning. So now, whenever pl♏ayers are presented with an option to go fishing, they're going to recall the great memories from this experience as their tent poles."

Just like hunting with Hosea♌, the game teaches you how to do this with an in-game companion rather than just shoving a bunch of tutorial screens at you. It's a far more immersive and natural way to get you to play around, have fun, and spend time with the game.

If you want something that you can finish quicker, check out our list of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best short games you can play.

I'm Issy, a freelancer who you'll now occasionally see over here c🌞overing news on GamesRadar. I've always had a passion 🥃for playing games, but I learned how to write about them while doing my Film and TV degrees at the University of Warwick and contributing to the student paper, The Boar. After university I worked at TheGamer before heading up the news section at Dot Esports. Now you'll find me freelancing for Rolling Stone, NME, Inverse, and many more places. I love all things horror, narrative-driven, and indie, and I mainly play on my PS5. I'm currently clearing my backlog and loving Dishonored 2.

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