Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games
Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games (MMORPGs) are a prominent genre in today's video game industry with the most popular MMORPGs generating billions of dollars in revenue and attracting millions of players. As they have grown, they have become a major target for both technological r...
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ndltd-CALPOLY-oai-digitalcommons.calpoly.edu-theses-36762021-08-20T05:02:57Z Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games Miller, Mitchell Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games (MMORPGs) are a prominent genre in today's video game industry with the most popular MMORPGs generating billions of dollars in revenue and attracting millions of players. As they have grown, they have become a major target for both technological research and sociological research. In such research, it is nearly impossible to reach the same player scale from any self-made technology or sociological experiments. This greatly limits the amount of control and topics that can be explored. In an effort to make up a lacking or non-existent player-base for custom-made MMORPG research scenarios A.I. agents, impersonating human players, can be used to "bootstrap" the research scenario to reach the necessary massive number of players that define the game genre. This thesis presents a system that makes its human players and A.I. players indistinguishable while preserving the basic characteristics of a typical MMORPG. To better achieve identical perception of human and A.I. players, our system centers around the collection, sharing, and exchange of information while limiting the means of expression and actions of players. A gameplay scenario built on the Panoptyk engine was constructed to imitate gameplay experienced in major MMORPGs. We conducted a user-study where subjects play through the scenario with a varying number of A.I. players unknown to them. Three versions of the scenario were created to assess how indistinguishable human and A.I. players were and vice versa. We found, across 24 participants, there were 32% correct identifications, 30% incorrect identifications, and 38% answers of "I don't know". This was broken down into 20% correct identifications, 42% incorrect identifications, and 38% answers of "I don't know" for bot characters and 46% correct identifications, 16% incorrect identifications, and 38% answers of ``I don't know'' for human characters. 2020-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/2191 https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3676&context=theses Master's Theses DigitalCommons@CalPoly Panoptyk game ai mmo npc mmorpg Computer and Systems Architecture Other Computer Engineering |
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Panoptyk game ai mmo npc mmorpg Computer and Systems Architecture Other Computer Engineering |
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Panoptyk game ai mmo npc mmorpg Computer and Systems Architecture Other Computer Engineering Miller, Mitchell Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games |
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Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games (MMORPGs) are a prominent genre in today's video game industry with the most popular MMORPGs generating billions of dollars in revenue and attracting millions of players. As they have grown, they have become a major target for both technological research and sociological research. In such research, it is nearly impossible to reach the same player scale from any self-made technology or sociological experiments. This greatly limits the amount of control and topics that can be explored. In an effort to make up a lacking or non-existent player-base for custom-made MMORPG research scenarios A.I. agents, impersonating human players, can be used to "bootstrap" the research scenario to reach the necessary massive number of players that define the game genre.
This thesis presents a system that makes its human players and A.I. players indistinguishable while preserving the basic characteristics of a typical MMORPG. To better achieve identical perception of human and A.I. players, our system centers around the collection, sharing, and exchange of information while limiting the means of expression and actions of players. A gameplay scenario built on the Panoptyk engine was constructed to imitate gameplay experienced in major MMORPGs. We conducted a user-study where subjects play through the scenario with a varying number of A.I. players unknown to them. Three versions of the scenario were created to assess how indistinguishable human and A.I. players were and vice versa.
We found, across 24 participants, there were 32% correct identifications, 30% incorrect identifications, and 38% answers of "I don't know". This was broken down into 20% correct identifications, 42% incorrect identifications, and 38% answers of "I don't know" for bot characters and 46% correct identifications, 16% incorrect identifications, and 38% answers of ``I don't know'' for human characters. |
author |
Miller, Mitchell |
author_facet |
Miller, Mitchell |
author_sort |
Miller, Mitchell |
title |
Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games |
title_short |
Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games |
title_full |
Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games |
title_fullStr |
Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games |
title_full_unstemmed |
Bootstrapping Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games |
title_sort |
bootstrapping massively multiplayer online role playing games |
publisher |
DigitalCommons@CalPoly |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/2191 https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3676&context=theses |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT millermitchell bootstrappingmassivelymultiplayeronlineroleplayinggames |
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