[games_access] Retro Remakes 2006 Competition - Accessibility Angle
Barrie Ellis
barrie.ellis at oneswitch.org.uk
Sun Apr 30 19:29:26 EDT 2006
In the very near future there will be a game programming competition held at
www.retroremakes.co.uk. This is where the majority of the one switch games
came from at www.oneswitch.org.uk - Part of the judging criteria will
involve an Accessibility Angle. It's not a catch all, but I'm wondering what
you all think to these draft guidelines for programmers. What we didn't want
to do, is seem too daunting:
ii) The final 20 marks out of 100 will be judged upon accessibility with a
possible 5 points awarded for each of the following accessibility
categories:
*Adjustable difficulty levels and player assistance.
Please bear in mind that not everyone who might play your game is of the
same ability, therefor there can be no such thing as a game that is "too
easy".
We understand that not every game can support an Easy / Medium / Hard
dynamic easily without destroying the core of the game - we recommend that
if you cannot easily increase or decrease the difficulty then you can
consider offering varying levels of assistance to the player, such as easier
access to extra lives (or more lives at the beginning of the game), time
limits removed or lengthened or provide the player with clues as to how to
progress.
*Accessibility of Controls.
The more control options that you support, the more you open up your game to
a wider userbase. From simple things like offering a variety of control
methods, redefinable keys to offering simplified control methods to your
game there are a myriad of ways that you can make the controls more
accessible.
*Sound options
At its most basic level, this category will have points awarded for
implementing basic audio menu's - will the user have the ability to
seperately control the output levels of the music and sound effects?
For more advanced implementation we ask you to consider anything from audio
cues for on screen events to closed captioning/subtitling your games.
* Clarity
The final 5 marks are awarded according to how well the accessibility
features gel within your game.
Is your game easy to understand or to play?
Are the menu's easy to navigate around?
Have you implemented things in an easy to understand and appropriate manner?
We want you to consider making your remake open to as many people as
possible to play regardless of their ability or skills. If you wish to
discuss the implementation of these features then please, feel free to visit
our forum and discuss it there.
The aim of these rules is not to limit what you create, but to open up what
you create to a wider audience. In every genre or style of game, we believe
that you should be able to implement these features at or beyond their most
basic level.
There will be a forum for help with accessibility issues at RetroRemakes
(that may be left open for ever more), plus links to ourselves for potential
help (unless there are any objections?). It's going to be interesting to see
what people can do in a few months. Any thoughts?
Barrie
www.OneSwitch.org.uk
p.s. - Also wondering if there's any one out there with enough web-space to
help host some of these potential accessible games, providing we get
permission?
More information about the games_access
mailing list