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Friction Design Archive

This archive collects Tactics, Patterns, Models, Taxonomies, Toolkits, Archetypes, Principles, Symptoms, Philosophies, Manifestos, and Emerging Approaches related to Friction Design.

Checkpoint Starvation

From Friction Design Archive


Summary: Limiting players’ ability to save the game progress to increase tension and value of survival.

Pattern Description

Checkpoint placement or accessibility is designed in a way that makes it difficult for the player to survive before they reach a possibility to save their progress. The access to checkpoints can be limited through distance between them, specific objects in their inventory that allow saving, or parts of the gameworld. The player is forced to give more value to the possibility of saving, and to put more thought into using it. This cautiousness creates additional tension and makes the user more vulnerable to unpredictable events of the game.

Interaction Design Implications

Checkpoint Starvation lowers user control and predictability, as they cannot save the progress at will. The pattern also affects consistency and standards, since saving is normally seen to be a conventionally stable mechanic. This pattern enhances tension and emotional engagement but risks user frustration if applied excessively or without clear internal logic.

Usage

Designers can use this pattern to introduce difficulty, psychological tension, and a more deliberate pacing. The player is being forced to think more strategically: planning routes, managing resources, and approaching threats more cautiously. For a more effective usage, designers may place save points at meaningful milestones, hide them behind environmental challenges, or tie them to rare items. The goal is not solely to frustrate the player but to amplify the emotional impact of exploration and risk-taking. Subtle cues such as lighting or sound can help users anticipate upcoming save opportunities, though designers may also intentionally provide none to maintain suspense.

Sub-patterns

  • Fixed Save Spots: Saving is restricted to predetermined locations within the game world.
  • Save-Token: Saving is only allowed on certain locations and when the player possesses a specific item. Adds realism to the gameplay and makes the player “value” the saving ability more.
  • No Saving the Game in the Dungeon / Level: The game prohibits saving while inside dungeons or certain levels.

Case Studies & Examples

Examples

  • Shin Megami Tensei: Digital Devil Saga (2004): Saving is only possible at Large and Small Karma Terminals (Fixed Save Spots).
  • White Day: A Labyrinth Named School (2017): Players must find pens to activate save points (Save-Token).
  • Dark Cloud (2001): Saving is disabled inside dungeons; players must exit to record progress.
  • Resident Evil series (1996): Typewriter ribbons function as Save-Tokens.
  • Dark Souls series (2011): Bonfires operate as controlled Fixed Save Spots.

Metadata & Relations

Heuristic Violations
Sub-patterns Fixed Save Spots, Save-Token, No Saving in the Dungeon / Level
Related Patterns Repetition Punishment, Engineered Scarcity, Limited Zones
Source da Silva Correia, Vanessa Filipa. "Explorando Fricção Estética por Dread: Desenvolvimento de Uma Visual Novel." Master's thesis, Universidade de Aveiro (Portugal), 2022.
License CC BY 4.0
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