Opening salvo, style versus substance, twine affordances, designs?, and so (Tuesday, 25 June 2019, 15:47PM)

Opening salvo

Hi. So because I’ve been working on an Inform 7 version of the punishment series, it seemed like a sensible idea to also give some thought to the Twine version, being in a text-y mindset etc.

It’s also because part of me feels like I can maybe knock out a quick Twine version and thus delay releasing the Inform version which I’m still caught up in indecision over in terms of whether to “save” it for IFCOMP, submit it to sub-q, or just to put it Out There. Probably it’ll be something like “submit to sub-q and get rejected” followed by “submit to IFCOMP and fail miserably” followed by “Put It Out There”. So, everything.

Anyway that’s neither here nor there, let’s talk Twine.

It’s probably silly to think I can do this quickly, nothing is quick.

Big question: “style versus substance”?

One thing I’ve been thinking about when it comes to Twine is whether I should be focusing on making a Twine that is “like a Twine” and so looks like and feels like whatever a “standard” Twine looks and feels like that. So narrative-oriented, links as actions and expanding descriptors, and stuff like that. Perhaps in some sense “using Twine the way it’s intended” or something.

On the other hand I could think more about using Twine as a platform/material/technology and so look at how the affordances of Twine as a language relate to the punishments, asking which elements of Twine are cyclical, reptitive, etc. This seems more obviously interesting to me, but could potentially yield something that “doesn’t look like a Twine” which would slightly defeat the purpose. This is especially the case when I start thinking about this as a vehicle to make a kind of very typographic/concrete version of the game and complete that with fancy stylesheets so it just doesn’t look very Twine-y.

I haven’t quite settled that, but I think it’s clear that I at least need to think about how the underlying affordances of Twine relate to the punishments. I can just have an “and then” kind of story, and obviously the punishments aren’t really about CYOA decision-making (or they could be in a comedy way, but I don’t think it’s the right way in this context? Maybe it would be funny to have a downloadable CYOA version?).

So I suppose its “both” then. It should still be like a Twine I think (and so less obviously like something like Burnt Matches), but should ultimately rely on the underlying mechanics of Twine (and hypertexts in general) to represent cyclical/eternal punishments.

(This feels related to questions I’ve been thinking about relative to Inform 7’s underlying world representation and having punishments be true to that world representation - the edible apple being the quintessential example of this kind of authenticity.)

Twine affordances

The other day in a café I sat down to try to write down the various scripting hooks and other techniques that Twine (2) has available to put to work here. (Though now I say that I kind of wonder if Twine 1.whatever is a better tool given the number of extensions? Although is using all those extensions somehow less Twine-y?)

So it’s a pretty detailed set of possibilities? A lot of these aren’t what I would call “typical” Twine techniques at the Twine-culture level necessarily, but still worth playing with? They are, after all, part of the language?

So look at the list I think these things:

Designs?

Sisyphus

Tantalus

Prometheus

Danaids

Zeno

And so…

Makes sense just to mock these up and see what we see I imagine?


Reporting in on the full draft, single- versus multi-passage, reload?, done? (Wednesday, 26 June 2019, 15:19PM)

Well, I made mock-ups of them all as promised. Here is what happened.

Sisyphus

I used the basic cycling link. There is no version of the link where the boulder reaches the top as that would create a (kind of) win state, so it’s just “nearly there” followed immediately by “rolling down”. It’s the simplest of all the things I did and it’s quite satisfying. Importantly it feels very Twiney. Kind of the ultimate Twiney thing, and a perfect fit here.

I went with very blank and sparse language which I think works fine. I mean, it just kind of works?

Little weird to feel like it might be “done” but who knows, perhaps it is.

Should I be doing the due dilligence of just playing a bunch of Twines to make sure I’m hitting the rough style and approach? Does that even make sense?

Tantalus

This one was hard because I wanted to be fancy with mouse-overs, but have to acknowledge at the same time that it won’t work with mobile. As such the base-line “trick” is that you click on links but they take you to pages where they turn out not to have worked, repeat ad nauseam. If using a mouse-style pointer this also happens on mouse over which is a little more fun and feels more like reaching, though I guess you could think of the movement as a reach and the click as a “grasp”, in which case clicking is fine.

I spent a fair bit of time trying to get single-passage versions of this going with text and link replacement and so on, particularly liking the idea of things happening both on mouse over and mouse out. But again, if we’re doing mobile that can’t work anyway so perhaps not the biggest loss. (Not to mention I couldn’t get it going anyway.) I think it’s probably only to do with me wanting to flex my (non-existent) technical abilities, so also no loss there.

Prometheus

I ended up doing this one just with timers and not with any save and load stuff. The save and load is pretty funny, but I suspect it’s just more funny for me and not particularly visible on the surface for an actual player. Further, saving and reloading doesn’t really register for me as a typical Twine experience kind of a thing, so I don’t think there’s enough of a hook into the “cultural practice” of Twine?

So the way it went is basically just a circular graph but with the transitions being based on timers. This is nice because the player has no agencies and just sees the cycle happening.

I ended up not implementing struggling because it just doesn’t feel like it adds enough, just transforms it toward being more of a kind of systems/simulation experience, which Twine can do, but isn’t really the kind of thing I’d say is typical or in its wheelhouse. As such the player does nothing except watch the eagle come and go.

Danaids

The most systems-y one in a lot of ways (as seen with the text adventure). This is the one I “spent” the circular graph card on, so it’s just four passages depicting the filling and emptying of the basin over and over again.

It maybe feels slightly less-than-ideal that two of the five are literal cyclical graphs, but on the other hand that really is the ultimate structure for a hypertext to represent repetition, so maybe it’s acceptable. And I get brownie points for having the cycles be implemented differently and with different agencies right?

Zeno

Relatively pleased that this one manages to “solve” the Zeno-representation problem in a very Twine-y way and also manages to do a single-passage thing (along with Sisyphus). In this case it’s using text replacement stuff that allows you to have the agency of “I run” and to have that alter the representation of how far along the track you are. It uses “half of” repeating on itself to create the requisite distance-to-go infinitely which is nice given that halving just stacks neatly.

So I mean… is this thing somewhat… done?

Single-passage versus multi-passage

I suppose this whole single-passage versus multi-passage thing does give us a particular aspect of Twine to think about. For me it currently feels most like a passage transition is a moment of action and time passing?

Or not? I don’t know. Maybe the question is just an open one - what is the weighting and meaning of a textual/link change on the current page versus a transition to another page? What if the new page represents the exact same kind of textual/link change? Then the difference is just a light flicker? (At least with the default Twine passage transition.)

When I think about what I’ve seen in-page stuff done for (almost always cycling links) it has tended to be a way of altering flavour texts or expanding descriptive elements, so more about “looking” I suppose. Whereas in Sisyphus I’m using it to represent a very active piece of exertion. I think I “get away” with it here just because the cycling link is too good of a joke/play-on-commands in the context of Twine not to use. Anyone who has Twine-d will recognize what’s going on and hopefully get a chuckle out of it. Which is part of the point of all this right?

Reload?

One weird thing I noticed with Twine is that if you do a standard reload in the page (or select the location bar and hit enter) it won’t reload back to the front page, which is maybe a little frustrating as it probably means 99% of people who even play will try one and get stuck in it and not bother to look at the others.

I guess I can see if there’s a way to alter that behaviour, but I suspect it might be baked in there. And I really don’t want to just offer an in-game “reload” as that would be admitting the punishments aren’t infinite.

World’s fastest game?

So then have I finished one of these games in basically a day? Perhaps so, I don’t think there’s so much to agonize over here.

Show it to a person or two and call it a day? Perhaps so.


A little extra note (Wednesday, 26 June 2019, 17:27PM)

Just to say I put the meta tag in for device font size stuff on mobile and it worked fine. All the things seem to be visible in a single screen now which is the ideal. Don’t think it needs to be more than that.

May I say, too, that I quite love using the absolutely default CSS for Harlowe. Looks just so much like a… Twine.


Blues, reversion (Friday, 28 June 2019, 9:51AM)

Jim and Mary took a look at the game overnight and I ended up feeling pretty dispirited by the feedback - through no fault of theirs, just that it showed kind of confusion and a lack of impact. See the testing documentation for their responses.

The big take-away for me was Mary’s point around the experience not really feeling like anything, and this tapped into my fear of precisely that. As such, I initially reacted to the feedback by getting down about it and thinking it’s just a bad piece of work, which is obviously an overreaction, but that’s how these things go right? Right, dear diary? In reaction I also made a specific change suggested by Mary (numbering the minigames) as a sort of way to assuage the feeling by just doing something.

However, in revisiting the game and in conversation with Rilla I’ve managed to recover my good humour about it. And specifically I think a helpful thing about Mary’s response (which I wrote to her about) is that she’s really identifying (for me) something about Twine’s more generally. Maybe it’s a lack of imagination on my part, but I do find the base-level agency of clicking links (and reading the reaction) pretty flaccid and uneventful. To me, that’s sort of a part of what a Twine is like, a very flat literary experience. (Part of it in the case of the punishment games, though, is also the intentional spareness of the text, but I don’t think that accounts for much of the lackluster experience, could be wrong.) And I don’t even think it’s a bad thing, it’s just a particular kind of affect that one can achieve in that particular medium, it’s very distancing and cold, and that can be a very interesting standpoint to have on a particular fictional world. (To some reasonable extent I think that Burnt Matches does a good job on this front - the neutrality of the medium plays well with the emptiness and post-apocalyptic stillness of the setting in that game.)

And then beyond this affective layer, I think that this Twine version is worthwhile for just the reasons I’ve been discussing throughout this process: it’s an engagement with Twine as a platform for expression, using a kind of “control variable” in the form of the punishment stories/interactions. And as per the discussion above, there’s stuff to say about how the affordances and technical nature of Twine play into that. And then there’s the kind of cultural layer as well. And then there’s the affective layer that worried me above. So there’s plenty of value.

How much of that value is “visible” to a generic player I don’t know. I think that you’d have to be someone who at least knows about Twine and has played other Twine’s to get a sense of how this game fits into that tradition. And then ideally I’d want/need that player to also have a sense of the larger project going on here in terms of the repeated “remediation” of the punishment game itself and what that tells you about how the present game was constrained and constructed.

So anyway, I’m okay again, thanks for listening.

I symbolically reverted the numbering system I’d added as a bandaid solution, too.