Description
Why do we play games that play themselves? Deconstruct the behavioral psychology and mathematical scaling behind the addictive idle gaming genre. Millions of players log on every day not to embark on epic quests or test their reflexes, but simply to watch a number slowly increase. The rise of idle gaming defies all traditional logic of what makes a video game engaging, yet it is one of the most profitable sectors in the modern mobile economy.Idle games, or "clickers," strip away complex gameplay to expose the raw, underlying architecture of the dopamine feedback loop. By breaking down progression into infinite, mathematically calculated micro-rewards, these games hijack the brain's innate desire for accumulation and efficiency. The player is not playing a game; they are managing a spreadsheet that rewards them for their absence, creating a compulsive need to return and harvest their artificial wealth.This book deconstructs the mathematical models and behavioral triggers that make non-interactive games wildly addictive. You will discover how developers balance exponential scaling curves, prestige resets, and offline progress to create an unbreakable cycle of engagement that seamlessly integrates aggressive monetization tactics.Unlock the dark arts of player retention. Analyze the absolute distillation of reward psychology and learn how modern software leverages our biological craving for progress to extract infinite value from minimal interaction.
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- 洋書電子書籍
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グローバルな次元の教授
Teac…



