Utilizing Behavioral Economics in Game Design

Utilizing Behavioral Economics in Game Design

Behavioral economics merges psychology and economics to understand how human choices diverge from pure rationality. It sheds light on outcomes that defy conventional economic reasoning.

Limited Rationality

Our cognitive constraints shape rationality. With limited time and cognitive capacity, we depend on mental shortcuts over exhaustive utility-maximizing analysis.

For instance, we only visit some stores in large shopping malls for the best buys. Instead, we use heuristics, like preferring familiar stores or focusing on a specific mall section.

Prospect Theory

Humans have a stronger aversion to losses than an equal desire for gains. How we perceive outcomes depends on our initial reference point.

Consider a VIP service: it's more attractive when framed as avoiding long queues (loss aversion) rather than offering quick access (gain).

Mental Accounting

We value money differently based on context, not just its amount. A $20 discounted sweater seems better than a $20 rebate.

For example, supermarket shoppers spend more on whims if it's under an "entertainment" rather than a "grocery" budget.

Anchoring Effect

Initial arbitrary values influence our decisions. A higher starting price can make customers agree to pay more.

A shopper might spend $75 on a jacket marked down from $100, even if they initially intended to pay only $50.

Choice Architecture

How choices are framed can steer decisions. Automatic enrollment in retirement plans sees higher participation than voluntary sign-up.

For instance, strategically placed healthy or profitable snacks near checkouts increase impulse purchases.

Behavioral economics unveils how humans make context-dependent choices. These insights inform strategies to help people navigate biases for better decision-making.

This understanding extends to the digital economy. Video game companies use psychology to maximize in-game spending. They design reward systems that exploit our motivations. Loot boxes, with their random rewards, drive repeated purchases. Limited-time offers play on our fear of missing out, and pricing strategies like $.99 endings create a false sense of affordability.

Apps cleverly use choice architecture to prompt continued spending. They design options to favor paid features over free versions. Once users make initial purchases, the sunk cost fallacy kicks in. Showing others' purchases, like "John in Chicago bought premium," leverages our tendency to follow the crowd.

Similarly, physical stores use behavioral science. Candy bars by checkouts tempt impulse buys. Upselling techniques and special offers exploit our cognitive biases.

Awareness of these cognitive biases enables us to counteract them, leading to more objective decision-making. Understanding psychology's role in economics equips us for more informed choices.

As the gaming industry evolves, it's crucial to acknowledge a pivotal shift in focus. Traditionally, video game companies heavily prioritized game development, channeling most resources into production. However, the reality post-launch tells a different story. More financial and strategic emphasis is placed on marketing, operating events, crafting new virtual items, offering VIP services, developing battle passes, and executing robust ad campaigns. These activities involve significant investment in buying traffic, engaging celebrities for advertising creatives, and other dynamic marketing strategies. All these facets are deeply intertwined with behavioral economics. Ignoring this aspect and allocating the bulk of the budget solely to production has contributed to the decline of many traditional game publishers. Recognizing and integrating behavioral economics principles into these post-launch strategies is beneficial and essential for video game companies' sustained success and growth in a highly competitive market.

Marina D., MBA. -- Marketing Expert

CEO & Founder @ VMKAgency.com | MBA, Online Marketing

1y

This is fascinating! The integration of prospect theory with game design brings valuable insights into player decision-making. Understanding human psychology is indeed a game-changer in creating exceptional gaming experiences. I look forward to diving into your article and joining the discussion. Thank you for sharing!

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Jeffrey Kesselman

Assistant Professor of Game Design and Development at Purdue Polytechnic Institute

1y

Absolutely transformative. NOT for the better. Welcome to the sleazy world of "F2P" and microtransactions.

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Oleksii Prokhorenko

Founder & CEO of GT Invest/ Member of the board at Ukrprompostach /business strategist/ execution of ideas

1y

Monte, your article is a must-read for anyone in the gaming industry. It’s incredible to realize how much our decision-making is influenced by these behavioral economics principles. It opens up a whole new approach to designing user experiences in games.

Jamie Yu

Sr Assessment Specialist

1y

The application of prospect theory in gaming, as discussed in your article, is a game-changer.

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