Most dragonslayers know there's plenty of gold to be found in your average free-to-play role-playing game.
But PerBlue's CEO Justin Beck believes there's plenty of green to be found there, too.
Using PerBlue's location-based RPG Parallel Kingdom as a model, Beck shared his insight on how free-to-play role-playing games can monetise in the most efficient ways possible.
According to Beck, the basic model for a free-to-play RPG goes something like this: players download the game for free, play and fall in love with the game, spend hard currency on virtual currency, spend the virtual currency in game, and then repeat the cycle until they're done with the game.
It sounds simple, but PerBlue's been able to manage an average revenue of $145 per player by applying four main points to help guide this simple model along.
The biggest boon to Parallel Kingdom's success was that it was designed with a rich, open world for players to explore - this kept players busy with content, leveling, and the desire to see more of the game environment.
Next, it offered a robust in-app messaging and messaging system which allowed players to stay in touch with friends whether they were online or not.
By keeping the messaging in-app, there was less impetuous for players to leave the app during a play session.
Another feather in Parallel Kingdom's cap was the addition of vanity goods ('swag' items) that offered no bonuses but changed a character's in-game appearance. These items were added as an afterthought, but soon accounted for 30 percent of PK's total revenue.
Apparently, players like to express themselves.
The final point that PerBlue 'got right' with Parallel Kingdom was a smooth friend and invite system that allowed players to form friendships and deepen their investment in the game.Here there be monsters
But for all it did right, Parallel Kingdom had a few mis-steps along the way.
Parallel Kingdom was designed as a synchronous multiplayer game, and Beck believes this is a mistake, "on mobile, users want to play asynchronously - they want to play when they want and they don't want to wait."
Another area where Beck saw room for improvement was in the persistence of the realm itself.
Players in Parallel Kingdom could carve out huge swaths of land for themselves, but these kingdoms remained long after the player had quit the game.
These fantasy abandoned empires soon cluttered the world with the RPG equivalent of ghost towns and were a distraction from the thriving and growing empires of active players.
Another issue that Beck saw with Parallel Kingdom was its real - and volatile - player economy. With players able to sell and set prices for virtual goods, the market became vulnerable to sellers making hasty sales in a panic.
While Beck ultimately advocates a laissez faire approach to economic manipulation, he suggests making small adjustment to item prices when needed to control market fluctuations.
The final piece of advice that Beck offered for aspiring free-to-play RPG makers is to have a straightforward customer support policy.
While the scope of the eventual playerbase makes one-to-one customer support impossible, Beck suggests getting ahead of the problem by posting update notes - essentially, changelogs smoothed over with a bit of PR lingo - weeks ahead of an update to the game's forums and responding to comments there.
This tactic builds anticipation (and trust) amongst the players and adds a level of transparency to the update process.
Closing his thought on the matter, Beck noted that "the best customer support you can offer is quality".
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Representing the former colonies, Matt keeps the Pocket Gamer news feed updated when sleepy Europeans are sleeping. As a frustrated journalist, diehard gamer and recovering MMO addict, this is pretty much his dream job.
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