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Encyclopedia > Levels

In computer and video games, a level (sometimes called a stage, course, map or landscape) is a separate area in a game's virtual world, in modern games typically representing a specific location such as a building or a city. In very early games, levels were simply "levels of difficulty", but since areas with few exceptions are ordered by increasing difficulty within a game, levels were directly associated with areas, and the word was quickly adopted for referring to areas. A computer game is a game composed of a computer-controlled virtual universe that players interact with in order to achieve a defined goal or set of goals. ... A computer game is a game composed of a computer-controlled virtual universe that players interact with in order to achieve a defined goal or set of goals. ... A virtual world is a computer-simulated environment intended for its users to inhabit and interact with via avatars. ...


Each level has an associated mission which may be as simple as walking from point A to point B or as complex as finding several hidden items in a limited time. When the mission is completed, the player usually moves on to the next level; if it is failed, the player must usually try again. Not all games order the levels in a linear sequence; some games allow the player to re-visit levels or choose in which order to complete them.


The use of levels

There are a number of reasons for the concept of the 'level' in video game design. Many early games used it to extend the length of a simple (and short) game by allowing a victorious player to play again on a higher difficulty setting (such as tougher opponents), a different game setting (such as a different maze layout), or both. In this manner, the game could last much longer and be more interesting without changing the basic gameplay style.


Even as games became more advanced, programming constraints such as a limit on primary memory with which to store graphics and sound still necessitated many games being split into levels - or from another point of view, using levels allowed a great deal of variety in the game despite hardware limitations. A platform game might have the protagonist fighting against skeletons in Hades for its first level, but upon its completion the game can pause for an interlude while it removes this data from memory and loads in the Greek soldiers he will be fighting in the next level. This could not have been done at the time without a level system, since the hardware could not hold both sets of game data at the same time nor display enough colors at one time to 'draw' the sprites and background. Platform games, or platformers, are a very popular genre of video games that originated in the early 1980s. ... The term Sprite has several meanings: A sprite is a class of preternatural legendary creatures. ...


Some modern games have attempted to gain the benefits of a level system while giving the impression that the games are continuous - i.e., one long game rather than levels. In these games, data required for an upcoming level is loaded into memory in the background as the player approaches it. In mathematics, a continuous function is one in which arbitrarily small changes in the input produce arbitrarily small changes in the output. ...


Dividing a game into levels has other advantages. One advantage is that non-stop action can overwhelm a player if the game does not afford the player points where he may rest, and levels break the game up into manageable sections which allow for this. Another advantage is that while a player can usually only complete a game once, they can still achieve a degree of satisfaction each time they successfully complete a level. Games which do not have levels in the strictest sense usually have some other satisfying objective which can be achieved more than once, such as completing a line in Tetris or conquering provinces in Rome: Total War. Tetris on the Nintendo Game Boy Tetris is a computer game invented by Alexey Pajitnov in 1985, while he was working for the Academy of Sciences in Moscow, inspired by a pentominoes game he had purchased earlier. ... Rome: Total War is a grand strategy computer game where players fight historical and fictious battles during the era of the Roman Republic, from 270 BCE to 14 CE. The game was developed by Creative Assembly and released on September 22, 2004. ...


Level design

A person who creates levels for a game is a level designer or mapper, the latter most often used when talking about first-person shooters where levels are more often referred to as maps. The computer programs used for creating levels are called level editors. Sometimes a compiler is also required to convert the source file format to the file format used by the game, particularly for first person shooters. Designing levels is a complex art that requires consideration for visual appearance, game performance, and gameplay. A level designer is a person who creates levels for computer and/or video games using a specific set of programs. ... Mapper has several meanings: A mapper is a person who creates levels for computer and/or video games. ... A first-person shooter (FPS) is a computer or video game where the players on-screen view of the game world simulates that of the character, and there is some element of shooting involved. ... A computer program (often simply called a program) is an example of computer software that prescribes the actions (computations) that are to be carried out by a computer. ... A level editor (also map editor and map maker) is a software application used to design levels, missions, backgrounds or maps for a videogame. ... A diagram of the operation of an ideal compiler. ... A file format is a particular way to encode information for storage in a computer file. ... A first-person shooter (FPS) is a computer or video game where the players on-screen view of the game world simulates that of the character, and there is some element of shooting involved. ... Game play (or gameplay) includes all player experiences during the interaction with game systems, especially formal games. ...


Levels in roleplaying games

In many role-playing games, levels are numbers that represent a character's overall skill and experience. To level or level up means to gain a level. This article is about traditional role-playing games. ...


This kind of level (sometimes referred to as a character level) should not be confused with the term 'level' meaning a discrete section of a videogame. RPGs typically do not have levels, although they often have towns, wilderness areas and dungeons which might be considered similar to levels. Gaining levels in an RPG is generally secondary to completing the game's objectives and something which happens naturally as a result of the challenges overcome on the way to completing the objectives, although some players enjoy levelling up characters for its own sake, especially in MMORPGs (this is known as powerlevelling). A massive(ly) multiplayer online role-playing game or MMORPG is a multiplayer computer role-playing game that enables thousands of players to play in an evolving virtual world at the same time over the Internet. ...


See also: experience point. Experience points (often abbreviated as exp or xp) are a representation of a characters advancement and improvement in skills in role-playing games. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Levellers - LoveToKnow 1911 (782 words)
The germ of the Levelling movement must be sought for among the Agitators, men of strong republican views, and the name Leveller first appears in a letter of the 1st of November 1647, although it was undoubtedly in existence as a nickname before this date (Gardiner, Great Civil War, iii.
Levellers, for they intend to sett all things straight, and rayse a parity and community in the kingdom." The Levellers first became prominent in 1647 during the protracted and unsatisfactory negotiations between the king and the parliament, and while the relations between the latter and the army were very strained.
During the twelve months which immediately preceded the execution of the king the Levellers conducted a lively agitation in favour of the ideas expressed in the Agreement of the people, and in January 1648 Lilburne was arrested for using seditious language at a meeting in London.
Levellers (2537 words)
THE LEVELLERS: A CHRONOLOGY AND BIBLIOGRAPHY By Roderick Moore The members of the political movement known to history as the Levellers were active for four years in the 1640s, during the English Civil War.
Colonel Thomas Rainsborough (M.P. for Droitwich) emerges as the highest-ranking Leveller sympathiser in the Army.
Levellers present the second Agreement of the People to the General Council of Officers, which rejects it because of proposals for religious toleration.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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