Casual game
A casual game is a video game targeted at a wide, mass market audience, as opposed to a hardcore game, which is a game targeted at a more niche audience of hobbyist gamers. Casual games may exhibit any type of gameplay and genre. They generally have simpler rules, shorter sessions, and less learned skill than hardcore games.[1]
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Countless casual games have been developed and published, alongside hardcore games, across the history of video games. A concerted effort to capitalize on casual games grew in the 1990s and 2000s, as many developers and publishers branded themselves as casual game companies, publishing games especially for personal computers, web browsers, and, after 2007, smartphones.
Overview
Most casual games have:
- Fun, simple gameplay that is easy to understand
- Simple user interface, operated with a mobile phone tap-and-swipe interface or a one-button mouse interface
- Short sessions, so a game can be played during work breaks,[2] while on public transportation, or while waiting in a queue anywhere
- Often, familiar visual elements, like playing cards or a Match 3 grid of objects[2]
Casual games generally cost less than hardcore games, as part of their strategy to acquire as many players as possible.[2] Any game monetization method can be used, from retail distribution to free-to-play to ad-supported.
The term "hyper-casual game" or "instant game" arose in 2017 to describe extremely easy-to-learn games that require no download, being played in an existing app like a web browser or messaging app, and that usually monetize by showing advertisements to the player.[3]
History
Journalist Chris Kohler wrote in 2010 that Namco's arcade game Pac-Man (1980), which debuted during the golden age of video arcade games, may be the first casual video game, due to its "cute cast of characters and a design sensibility that appealed to wider audiences than the shoot-em-up Space Invaders."[4] It is estimated to have been played more than ten billion times during the 20th century,[5][6] making it the highest-grossing video game of all time.[7]
In 1989, Nintendo's Game Boy was released with Tetris as a free pack-in game. It was quickly learned and immensely popular, and is credited with making Nintendo's fledgling portable gaming system a success.[8]
Microsoft's Solitaire (1990), which came free with Microsoft Windows, is widely considered the first hit "casual game" on a computer, with more than 400 million people having played the game as of 2007.[9] Subsequent versions of Windows included casual games Minesweeper, FreeCell, and Spider Solitaire. The company published four Microsoft Entertainment Packs for casual gaming on office computers from 1990 to 1992.
Casual games started to flourish online in the 1990s along with the rise of the World Wide Web, with card games and board games available from paid services like AOL and Prodigy, and then from web portals, like Yahoo! Games and Microsoft's Gaming Zone. In the mid-2000s, more sites specialized in game hosting and publishing, such as Gamesville and RealNetworks. Some publishers and developers branded themselves specifically as casual game companies, like Big Fish Games, PopCap Games, and MumboJumbo.[10] The advent of Shockwave and Flash created a boom in web-based games, encouraging designers to create simple games that could be hosted on many different websites and which could be played to completion in one short sitting. One of the most prominent casual games, Bejeweled, started out as a Flash game that could be downloaded for a fee, or purchased at retail. As late as 2009, there was still a market for US$20 casual games purchased at retail or as a download.[11]
In 2008 and 2009, casual social network games rapidly attained mainstream popularity following the release of Mafia Wars for Facebook, and Happy Farm in China.[12] Happy Farm inspired many clones, including the most popular social network game, FarmVille (2009), which peaked at 83.76 million monthly active users in March, 2010.[12][13] These games innovated in viral marketing by rewarding players for sending invites to friends and posting game updates on their Facebook Wall.
Casual games became popular on smartphones immediately upon their debut, with touch-screen phones like the iPhone of 2007 featuring large color displays, all-day availability to the phone owner, and intuitive tapping-and-dragging user interfaces.
Video game consoles' primary audience is hardcore gamers, but there are some casual games on every game console, and Nintendo's Wii console's unique motion-sensing controller appealed to a more casual audience that was perhaps intimidated by other consoles' gamepad input devices. Wii Sports (2006), a collection of five simple sports games in which players used the game controller to swing a tennis racket or a baseball bat, was bundled with the Wii console in most territories and sold over 82 million copies as of 2019.[14]
Genres
Casual games are found in many game genres. Early-2000s categorizations by Big Fish Games[15] and Gamezebo, a casual game review site[16] named seven popular genres in casual games:
- Puzzle games: Bejeweled series, Collapse! series, Luxor series
- Hidden object games: Mystery Case Files series, Mortimer Beckett series, Hidden Expedition series
- Adventure games: Dream Chronicles series, Aveyond series, Nancy Drew series
- Strategy games (including time management): Diner Dash series, Delicious series, Cake Mania series
- Arcade & action games: Plants vs. Zombies, Peggle series, Feeding Frenzy series
- Word & trivia games: Bookworm, Bookworm Adventures series, Bonnie's Bookstore
- Card & board games: Slingo Quest, Lottso! Deluxe, Luxor Mahjong
Casual Games Association
An industry group called the Casual Games Association was founded in 2005 to promote casual games and to provide educational, networking, and market research resources to casual game developers and publishers.[10] It published a print magazine and hosted annual conferences called "Casual Connect" in Seattle, Kiev, Amsterdam and London with what it said were "upwards of 7,000 professional attendees each year".[17] In 2018, the show was sold to media company Greenlit Content, who then rebranded the show "GameDaily Connect".[17][18]
See also
- Hyper-casual game; a game minimalistic game that is easy-to-learn, and often free-to-play
- Social network game; a casual game with social network integration
- Browser game; a game that is played using a web browser
- Minigame; a short video game contained within another video game
- Indie game; a game produced by individual or small team without publisher support
- Game development and Independent video game development
- Gamezebo and Jay is Games; casual game review websites
- Hardcore mode
- Gamer dedication spectrum
References
- Boyes, Emma (Feb 18, 2008). "GDC '08: Are casual games the future?". GameSpot. Archived from the original on 2011-07-11. Retrieved May 3, 2008.
- "Welcome To Gaming Lite". Computer Gaming World. September 1992. p. 74. Retrieved 3 July 2014.
- "Hyper-casual: Mobile gaming's newest genre". AppLovin Blog. 2018-08-03. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
- Kohler, Chris (May 21, 2010). "Q&A: Pac-Man Creator Reflects on 30 Years of Dot-Eating". Wired. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- Mark J. P. Wolf (2008), The video game explosion: a history from PONG to Playstation and beyond, ABC-CLIO, p. 73, ISBN 0-313-33868-X, retrieved April 10, 2011,
It would go on to become arguably the most famous video game of all time, with the arcade game alone taking in more than a billion dollars, and one study estimated that it had been played more than 10 billion times during the twentieth century.
- Chris Morris (May 10, 2005). "Pac Man turns 25: A pizza dinner yields a cultural phenomenon – and millions of dollars in quarters". CNN. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
In the late 1990s, Twin Galaxies, which tracks video game world record scores, visited used game auctions and counted how many times the average Pac Man machine had been played. Based on those findings and the total number of machines that were manufactured, the organization said it believed the game had been played more than 10 billion times in the 20th century.
- Steve L. Kent (2001), The ultimate history of video games: from Pong to Pokémon and beyond : the story behind the craze that touched our lives and changed the world, Prima, p. 143, ISBN 0-7615-3643-4, retrieved May 1, 2011,
Despite the success of his game, Iwatani never received much attention. Rumors emerged that the unknown creator of Pac-Man had left the industry when he received only a $3500 bonus for creating the highest-grossing video game of all time.
- "Tetris' Maker Has His "A" Game". 23 November 2005. Retrieved 2008-08-11.
- "Casual Gaming Worth $2.25 Billion, and Growing Fast". 29 October 2007. Retrieved 2008-08-11.
- "CGA :: Casual Games Association". web.archive.org. 2009-02-17. Retrieved 2019-05-30.
- "CGA :: Casual Games Association". web.archive.org. 2009-02-17. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
Some websites charge $19.95 per downloaded game others offer unlimited subscriptions for $10.00 a month and others supply advertising supported games.
- Kohler, Chris (December 24, 2009). "14. Happy Farm (2008)". The 15 Most Influential Games of the Decade. Wired. p. 2. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- "Zynga's CityVille becomes the biggest-ever app on Facebook". VentureBeat. 2011-01-03. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
- "IR Information : Financial Data - Top Selling Title Sales Units - Wii Software". Nintendo Co., Ltd. Retrieved 2019-05-29.
- Big Fish Games (2002-03-01). "Casual Game Genres on Big Fish Games". Big Fish Games. Retrieved 2002-03-01.
- Gamezebo staff (2006-03-01). "Casual Game Genres on Gamezebo". Gamezebo. Retrieved 2006-03-01.
- "Casual Connect joins the Greenlit Content family". GameDaily.biz. Retrieved 2019-05-30.
- "Casual Connect Rebrands To GameDaily Connect". GameDaily.biz. Retrieved 2019-05-30.