February 21, 2004

Who Wants To Be a Jack-of-all-Trades?

In many class-based MMORPGs, class options include pure classes and hybrid classes. Pure classes excel at what they do, but have a more limited ranged of abilities, while hybrid classes have a larger range of abilities, but have limited expertise in them. The data presented here would also apply to skill-based systems because all these systems have a skill cap and players must decide whether to excel in one skill line or spread out, unless the system mechanics make one or the other a better option (like in DAOC).

Both gender and age were found to impact the preference for pure or hybrid classes. Female players tend to prefer hybrid classes. Also, older players prefer hybrid classes.

Among the motivation components and personality traits, the motivations “compete” (t = -10.00, p < .001, r = .18) and “achieve” (t = -7.36, p < .001, r =.13) were the best discriminators for players who preferred to focus rather than spread.

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The Demographics of Motivations

A simplified version of the motivations assessment (rating 7 statements) was tested and produced results that were highly similar to the full assessment (rating 30 statements), though of course it would have been impossible to articulate the condensed scale without having the full scale. The results of the simplified assessment are presented here.

The four highest-rated motivations for playing an MMORPG were Achievement, Immersion, Socialization, and Escapism, in that order. The reported means are only representative of the sample, drawn mostly from EQ-clones (DAOC, SWG, AO, AC etc).


For the most part, the gender and age differences are what would have been expected. The only exception may be that female players might have been expected to rate the Immersion component higher than the male players. The table also shows the relative impact of age and gender on the motivational differences and the two seem to play an equal role among the motivations.

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Resource/Manufacturing/Combat Classes

Many recent MMORPGs have well-differentiated non-combat professions that are viable in and of themselves. In other words, unlike the EQ system, you don’t have to fight to get the resources or money (or rely on your guild) to buy the materials to skill up in crafting. The appeal of the resource and manufacturing classes were explored in comparison with the combat classes. Respondents rated the appeal of the following three broad classes:

If the following 3 types of roles were equally well-implemented and balanced, how much would each appeal to you?
Resource Gathering: Explorer/Geologist/Miner/Hunter/Trapper
Manufacturing: Blacksmith/Alchemist/Armorer/Tailor
Combat: Warrior/Archer/Healer/Sorcerer

Since most MMORPGs tend to be combat-focused, it was expected that the combat rating would be skewed higher. The goal was to explore whether particular slices of age, gender, or motivations would provide a reasonably good understanding of whether certain players were more likely to prefer certain non-combat professions.


The results seem to indicate that preference for these three board types of classes do not vary with gender or age very much, but may be better explored in terms of player motivations.

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Hours of Play per Week

The mean of the number of hours played per week was 21.9, and the median was 20. Players under the age of 23 tend to play about 2 hours more each week than players over 22 (23.2 -vs- 21.2, p = .01, significant, but a trivial difference with this sample size). There were no gender differences.

A multiple regression analysis using age, gender, motivations and personality traits revealed that the motivation to socialize and find group affiliation were the best predictors of hours of play per week. Even though the contribution coefficients seem small, for comparison note that between the lowest and highest scoring players on the Social motivation is a difference of about 8.5 hours played per week (from 17.1 to 25.5 hours).

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Learning Life Lessons

Anecdotal and quantitative data seemed to suggest that many players felt they were learning important life lessons from MMORPGs. Several questions were included in a recent survey to explore this aspect in more depth. The following graphs show age and gender differences among respondents who used the top two of the seven agreement rating points, labeled from Strongly Disagree to Strongly Agree. So the 45.5% at the top right of the first graph means that 45.5% of female players over the age of 35 strongly agreed that important life lessons can be learned in MMORPGs.

Both the gender and age differences are quite striking in that they are either non-linear or only affect one gender. In the first graph, younger players tend to feel that important life lessons can be learned in MMORPGs, but for female players, this sentiment rebounds with age while it declines among male players. In the second graph, about one-third of female players across all ages feel that their MMORPG experiences have helped them grow as a person whereas among male players, this sentiment declines significantly with age.

Multiple regression analyses were performed on both data sets using the demographics, motivations and personality factors as independent variables.


The multiple regression results showed that the motivation to socialize within the game was the best predictor of whether a player felt they were learning important life lessons or achieved personal growth from the game. To ensure that this result wasn’t merely due to the covariance of gender and score on the “social” motivation, the multiple regression was repeated with only the male players. The coefficients for the “social” motivation were almost exactly the same, .26 and .27 respectively. In fact, the coefficients for the “social” motivation were weaker when the multiple regression was done only with female players, .20 and .20 respectively.

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Through The Looking-Glass

This dataset explores several aspects of identity projection through the use of avatars. When players create and play their characters, how many of them choose to act and behave pretty much the same as they do in real life, and how many deliberately try out new personalities? And do players tend to behave and act the same way across their different characters? Are there gender or age differences? And finally, do motivations for playing or personality traits have an influence on how identity is projected through avatars?

Female players are more likely to behave and interact in an MMORPG very similarly to how they behave and interact with others in real life when compared with male players.

Age, however, seems to be the more important factor.


The multiple regression results show that Introverts are more likely to behave similarly while Extraverts tend to behave more differently. Also note that Age and Extraversion do not correlate (r = -.02).

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Players were also asked how consistently they act and behave when they are playing different characters. Gender and age had no impact on the outcome of the responses.

The multiple regression results show that it is the desire for immersion and role-playing that most differentiates players who behave consistently across their characters from the players who don’t.

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Finally, respondents were asked whether they felt that they were more of “who you really are” in the MMORPG than in real life. There were no significant gender differences.

The multiple regression results echo the results from the questions on behavioral similarity, and show that Introverts are creating characters not only similar to themselves in real life, but that they act and behave in a way that they feel is more true of who they really are.

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February 20, 2004

The Daedalus Project is One Year Old

I'm trying to be a little more adventurous in creating a better user-experience - so you'll see the dynamic item-script in this survey, the new "explore what's available" widget, and hopefully a user-aware component starting the next survey (the back-end DB will keep track of sections you've previously filled out and let you skip them).

I’m also trying to be a little more verbose when reporting the stats, mostly in reporting effect-size estimates so that it’s easier to understand the relative importance of contributing factors given that so many factors reach statistical significance with the large sample size. I’m also running multiple regressions using age, gender, motivations and personality traits as the independent variables to sort out the relative contribution of these variables in observed phenomena.

A particularly interesting finding presented in this issue was the multiple regression analysis showing that the personality trait Extraversion (taken from the Big-5 factors) was the best predictor of how players projected their own identities onto their avatars. Introverts are more likely to create characters that were similar to who they were, and in some cases more of “who they really are”, whereas extraverts are more likely to create characters that were different from themselves, perhaps trying out new roles and identities.
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