CROWD COVER
Edge|June 2021
How social stealth found its people in the world of indie multiplayer
JEREMY PEEL
CROWD COVER

Will Wright is certain: “That’s not gonna work.” Maxis is mid-development on Spore, and an engineer named Chris Hecker is describing an ambitious side project. An asymmetrical multiplayer game called SniperParty, its premise is as binary as its title: one player attends a party as a spy, blending into the throng of mannered guests while surreptitiously swapping statues and planting bugs on ambassadors. Meanwhile, a second player with a sniper rifle occupies a roof across the street, with a single task: they must pick out the spy in the crowd and take the shot. But they need to be sure of their target because they have just a single bullet. For the sniper, the game is about reading social cues, spotting a strange gesture or conversation cut short and mentally building the case against a suspect.

It’s a design that tends to quickly woo those who hear about it: easy to grasp, yet dense with possibilities. SimCity creator and industry mentor Wright, however, isn’t on board. “It’s gonna be too easy to tell who the player is,” he concludes. As it turns out, Spore will be a grand lesson for Wright in what works and what doesn’t. But the assessment his game receives gives Hecker pause. “When game design genius Will Wright tells you that your game’s not gonna work, you’re like, ‘Ah, shit,’” he remembers.

This story is from the June 2021 edition of Edge.

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This story is from the June 2021 edition of Edge.

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