Game Design Beyond Games

Applying game design thinking beyond games

Games are complex systems that by design are required to be understood by a large number of users. To make a game work, a designer has to bridge the gap between a complicated system (the code and rules) and a human being (the player). Unlike a film, a game is an active engagement. For that engagement to work, the “player” in any project needs:

  • A clear objective: Knowing exactly what the “win state” is.
  • Legible systems: Understanding how their actions affect the outcome.
  • Immediate feedback: Getting a “signal” that they are doing it right.
  • Balanced pacing: Not being overwhelmed with information too early.

I use this same structural logic to help people with their non-game projects. Whether you are building an app, a training course, or a complex service, I look at your project as a system that needs to be playable.

📝Example: Dry Education Course

The Problem: you have a training program or online course with a high “drop-out” rate. People start with excitement but quit halfway through because the material feels like a “grind.”

The Game Design Lens: This is a Challenge vs. Skill balance problem (Flow State). If the “difficulty spike” is too high too early, or if there is no “reward” for finishing a hard chapter, the player quits. The Solution: We audit the Pacing of your content. We look for the “Boss Fights” (the hardest concepts) and ensure they are preceded by enough “Power-ups” (practice and clear wins). We restructure the curriculum so that every 15 minutes, the student gets a “Satisfying Conclusion” that motivates them to start the next “Level.”

Interested in discussing more?