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The Challenge, Fun and Practical Benefits of RTS Games

Playing RTS can strengthen skills like self-analysis, critical thinking, planning and decision making, and reinforce a proactive, positive approach to challenges.

Brandon Casteel, Blogger

October 14, 2015

11 Min Read

Last week, I wrote a piece in which I attempted to define what an RTS is. Working from that definition and some of the points made in that article, I would like to discuss what I consider to be the benefits of playing RTS games in particular. As I wrote in last weeks’ article: “RTS, to me at least, are more than idle ways to pass the time, ways to blow off steam, or a means of escapism; they’re playgorunds for exercising the mind, and they do so in ways that I contest few other genres can. Among other things, playing RTS can strengthen skills like self-analysis, critical thinking, planning and decision making, and reinforce a proactive, positive approach to life and adversity.”

And that is exactly what I want to examine and explore in this article, with a hefty dose of what I consider to be the primary sources of fun and challenge, to boot.

Self Analysis

One of the primary things you learn when beginning to play RTS is that they are hard. So difficult are they, in fact, that in virtually every case new players turn to watching gameplay analysis of better players, reading how-tos and strategy guides and memorizing popular build orders to get ahead. It’s very difficult for the average player to craft winning strategies without the support of a larger community contributing to a common pool of knowledge of how to play the game (this is often called the game’s ‘meta’).

One paragon tool for improvement is the player’s own gameplay, recorded in most major RTS in the form of replays of past matches they’ve played. Many RTS, from Grey Goo to Company of Heroes 2, to StarCraft 2 and Supreme Commander, have options to automatically save all of a players’ past games into a replays repository for review upon demand. Supreme Commander innovated with GPGNet, and Blizzard with Battle.net, simple ways to share replays with others, and services like gamereplays.org exist as places for players to seek advice from game communities via their replays on how to improve at any given title.

In the StarCraft 2 community in particular (as well as in the Supreme Commander community during its heyday) it is very common to see players spend almost as much time going over their replays, both of victories and defeats, as they do actually playing; they want to see what both they and their opponent did well and did poorly. Defeats, the common wisdom goes, are often more valuable learning tools than victories. What did my opponent do that I can incorporate or improve upon? Where did the game turn around, and why? What choices could I have made differently, where were the weaknesses in my strategy? YouTuber and eSports personality Day[9] rose to prominence for a friendly, positive approach to teaching newer players these sorts of thought patterns: what did this pro do well? What did they do poorly? How can I use this unit in creative ways, or how can I cope with this unorthodox situation?

What this all exemplifies and reinforces in the RTS player is critical self-analysis, a skill most all of us could use polishing up on. Both in RTS and in life, it is an invaluable skill to be able to review one’s past performance clinically, not to agonize over past mistakes but to learn real lessons on how to avoid future mistakes. It has been said that “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it” and RTS make this baldly apparent. The same mistakes result in the same losses under the same scenarios. There’s no such thing as ‘good enough’ – there’s always going to be someone better out there.

The journey, as it turns out, is the reward: learning from ones’ mistakes, being able to view a defeat as a learning opportunity instead of a setback, a chance to grow instead of an ego-crushing validation of one’s own negative thoughts about themselves. I’ve seen RTS players advocate eschewing a focus on one’s win-loss ratio or win percentage, intentionally ‘throwing’ tens or dozens of matches so there’s nowhere to go but up. Ladder anxiety can be combated by the right mindset, one where the player is constantly seeking to learn, to improve, and to enjoy the competition. Sure, losing sucks, but the good players will incorporate the lessons from their losses to turn future encounters into wins.

In RTS and in life, if you’re not learning, you’re losing, and even if you’ve had a defeat or setback, as long as you’ve learned from it you haven’t lost. RTS is an excellent arena for this, as are most competitive games. What makes RTS special? Well, in addition to promoting a positive attitude towards learning from losses (which organized sports should also teach, as well as MOBAs, FPS and most other competitive games). Let’s take a look at some more skills and behaviors that RTS can help players train/reinforce.

Critical Thinking and Pressure

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: RTS are difficult! They ask more of their players than virtually any other genre of game, with the possible exception of the fighting game genre. Building bases, upgrading units, braving the fog of war to see what your opponent’s up to, microing units, macro-ing, balancing and increasing your resources, expanding, moving, coordinating attacks and defenses. And, most importantly, they have you do all of these things with limited resources. In most RTS, there will be 1, 2 or more concrete resources to acquire, manage, and spend as well as implicit resources like time, attention, and knowledge of what one’s enemy is up to.

RTS intentionally put pressure on their players to make effective decisions quickly and with limited information. This, ultimately, is a training ground for critical thinking. RTS players are intended to have a broad knowledge of the options available to them and their opponents, including but not limited to the functions and rough timings for enemy units and strategies, the implications of play for any given terrain features in use on the particular play area (for instance in StarCraft 2, Zerg tend to fare better in open areas away from cliffs or chokepoints, while Protoss tend to prefer to fight Zerg in chokes but Terrans in more open areas) or a build order that gets a player to a certain game state as efficiently as possible.

To win, players must spend both their in-game resources and their implicit resources wisely, and make accurate, quick decisions based on incomplete or potentially inaccurate evidence. Where is your opponent’s army? Do they have a strike force sneaking around the back of your base/force to snipe off important investments? How does your opponent’s income stack up against yours? How does their production? What’s the best path forward, considering both your game state and that of your opponent? Are they building a superweapon?

Planetary Annihilation does something quite interesting in this space, with its multi-planet systems, spherical planet shapes, and multiple information layers per planet (ground and orbital, each requiring their own detection systems) requiring the player to be very, very proactive in seeking information, as well as making such information indespensibly important. Have they expanded to the Metal planet? Are they building an Annihilaser? Are they loading that moon up with Halleys? Are there nukes being built? How can I get my forces onto this fortressed up world?

To win, players must think critically both in the short term and long term. In the short term, misplaced armies, mismanaged units, and mistimed abilities (assuming the game contains active abilities of some sort, either on units or in the form of global effects like superweapons) can cost a player a match outright. In the long term, inefficient economy growth, passivity, and misreading of an opponent’s strategy can leave a player in an unwinnable position. And players are unable to do everything they might want, all at once. this is core to the RTS genre, and the reason for build orders, army compositions and the like. Players tend to be required to focus on a relatively small number of things at once, and the ability to evaluate ones’ options and choose an effective way forward in a matter of moments is an invaluable skill to train, both in the artificial arena of an RTS game, and in the actual arenas of life.

Few general skills are as valuable and transferable as the ability to make accurate decisions decisively, under pressure, and with limited information. It’s important in the boardroom, when deciding where to go eat with a significant other, in evaluating the wisdom of a potential impulse buy, et cetera. Not to say, of course, that RTS will assuredly improve a person’s ability to make decisions, but in general, practice in being decisive and executing on a plan is only good for the practicioner.

Executing on a Plan

Speaking of pressure, this tends to be a key compontent of RTS games. Pressure provides a large portion of the challenge and benefit of making such games real-time. Unlike in virtually all 4X or Grand Strategy, players aren’t in control of the pacing of the game, and are (as mentioned above) asked to do quite a lot of things at once, while meaningfully planning and executing on a strategy that can take upwards of 20 minutes to put together.

Now, RPGs and 4X games tend to span a continuous narrative across tens of hours of play and potentially months of objective time. These games can train long-term decision making and planning in ways RTS, which are session based, cannot. However, it’s seldom that players are asked to create a plan and asked to build and protect a complex system to execute it within the course of 30 or so minutes. To do this takes intense concentration, mental endurance, and adaptability. RTS is virtually unique in its blending of short term decision making and intermediate term decision making in the video gaming space, with only some board games really capturing this requirement within discrete sessions or matches: most shooters tend not to have meaningful personal or even team progression across the breadth of their matches, and even MOBAs, which tend to last significantly longer than RTS matches, have downtime, a decreased burden of overall awareness of the game state (since each player is only one fifth of the effort being put into winning the match) and, arguably if not definitively, have fewer types of progression that must be monitored and planned to effectively advance into the latter stages of play.

So what does this mean and what is its significance? Well, ultimately, it means “RTS are hard!” I told you I’d say it again. practically, RTS require constant high level mental engagement from players, exercising planning and concentration in ways that are not seen in FPS, RPG, MOBA etc, broadly speaking. As mentioned before, they challenge both short term and long term planning, though some RTS tend to favor one or the other of these more.

Looking at StarCraft or any -Annihilation or -Commander, the number of things the player has to juggle and think about can increase exponentially across the  course of a match, with inefficiency and inattention to detail punishable by ignominous defeat. Look at progamers like Idra, who was known for incredible efficiency in play, with very low resources ‘wasted’ up to several minutes into a game, indicating he had hid build orders planned and executed down, virtually, to the second. That sort of concentration, adaptability and planning is useful (again) in the workplace, business and more.

The Challenge and The Fun

To me, these challenges are part of the fun. It’s immensely satisfying to outwit, outplan, and outmaneuver another human person, especially if you can be reasonably assured that the other human person is roughly about as good at the game as you are (there’s a topic for future articles, matchmaking!) RTS gamers tend to get a rush from, well, feeling superior. The planning isn’t enough, the multitaksing and micro themselves aren’t enough, though there is a high degree of satisfaction in artistic or novel play and execution (there’s a reason people love watching StarCarft 2, after all!). Even the winning itself, while it provides a rush, aren’t enough.

I think, anecdotally of course, and speaking from personal experience, the journey is the destination (as I said before). Challenging oneself to improve in this aspect of play, to face up against a strategy that previously crushed you utterly, to be the sole author of one’s victory, match after match, and challenge after challenge. I’m using high-handed language, sure. And most of this article is bloviation about life skills that can be honed or practiced by playing a particular type of game.

RTS push you to your mental limits, and taunt you with the promise of improvement, just around the corner. They tempt you to spend those hours analyzing, reviewing, learning and improving to increase a score that is ultimately meaningless in the real world (unless you end up winning money in a tournament). But behind that is a mindset of progress, of overcoming adversity, of sticking it out defeat after defeat until victory is achieved, and I think that should be celebrated.

Thanks for your time.

Reposted from http://waywardstrategist.com/2015/10/02/why-rts-the-challenge-fun-and-benefits-of-playing-rts-games/

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