Monday, July 2, 2012

Hype - How To Play

Ken and I have been struggling with the problem of how to teach people to play our games.  Most of our games are fairly niche, and we would like to broaden their appeal to people who might not know how to play.

We wanted something that would accomplish the following goals:

  • Quickly teach the players the basics of game play
  • Look integrated into the app
  • No download or streamed content
  • Measurable
  • We don't want to inflate the App size too much
  • Something we can create without too much custom programming

What we ended up with was a how to play integrated tutorial that was implemented with an imbedded WebView that plays back HTML 5 generated via Hype.  That was a mouth full.  Good thing we have a video showing it in action:





Hype


Using Hype, you can create HTML 5 web content with animations and interactive content.  The best part is it creates really small output as it just requires the art assets and some generated javascript to control the animations.


There are just a view basic types of object you can use in Hype such as Box, Text, Button, ...


I wish Hype had Arrows and other nicer callout objects build into it.  However between the art assets I already had and using Snagit for the other assets, I was able to put together what I needed.

I was actually able to simulate gameplay just by using these basic Hype elements and its Key framing capability.  It only took one evening to finish the Hype project.  I thought about using something like Camtasia to record a video of some of these parts as opposed to rolling the play animations by hand.  However, I wanted the output really small and it wasn't that hard to simulate the effects I needed.  However, given you can embed video in Hype it would be interesting to try it with embedded video clips.

HTML


You can easily generate the HTML assets for the Hype project.  It just produces a simple "main" html file and a folder containing the Javascript, Images, and other resources needed to run the project.

Given this is just HTML, you can even upload it to a website and interact with it directly in a browser:




We just took these generated assets and added them to our iOS project so they would be built into the resource bundle.  If you do add it to your project, be sure to include it as a folder reference so xcode will preserve the folder layout in the resource folder.  Otherwise, it will get flattened into a single folder which could cause issues.

Loading WebView From Resource


You load resource based files into the WebView just like you would load any local file.  Here is some example code that loads the above example:

    NSString     *howToPlayDevice = [FLUtil iPad] ? @"iPad" : @"";
    NSString     *resourcePath    = [[NSBundle mainBundle] resourcePath];
    NSString     *howToPlayPath   = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@/html/HowToPlay%@.html",
                                               resourcePath, howToPlayDevice];
    NSURL        *url             = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:howToPlayPath];
    NSURLRequest *requestObj      = [NSURLRequest requestWithURL:url];
    [self.howToPlayWebView loadRequest:requestObj];

One final tip, make sure the canvas in Hype is the same size as the WebView so it fits perfectly with no scaling or borders. That's all there is to it.  

Measurable


One of the requirements was for us to be able to measure the effectiveness of this effort through Flurry.  In order to do that, we need to be able to communicate from the HTML Webview into the Objective-C code.  

Alexandre Poirot has a nice article on How to Properly Call ObjectiveC From Javascript.  I didn't need to use his entire framework, but I used the basic concept to allow Hype's Javascript to be intercepted by the WebView's delegate.

In Hype, I setup a Javascript function to post to a special URL that can be intercepted by the shouldStartLoadWithRequest UIWebView delegate.  




I used a custom URL scheme called "howtoplayscene" and passed Hype's current scene name so I can tell what scene the user is viewing.  By doing this in an iframe that we create and then destroy it so the user doesn't see anything.  Plus, we can use the same HTML for the embedded WebView as well as a regular browser.  Although, there won't be any tracking when running in a regular browser.

Once the javascript is in place, each scene can then be configured to call the trackHowToPlayCreentScene function when it's loaded:




That's all there is to it on the Javascript side.   The Objective-C side is fairly straightforward:




With this in place, we will get custom events in Fluury that look something like:
  • HowToPlay.Scene.Goal
  • HowToPlay.Scene.Tool Bar
  • Show HowToPlay.Scene.Step 1
  • Show HowToPlay.Scene.Step 2
We will be able to track how many users make it through all they steps and which percentage of users drop off at any given point in time.  Hopefully, with this information we can help make the tutorial better and find where and if users are getting stuck.  We will also be able to correlate information such as the percentage of people that complete the tutorial that go on to purchase.

The other little trick I use, as seen above, is when the user complets the How To Play tutorial.  I have the HTML navigate to "http://www.fivelakesstudio.com/Five_Lakes_Studio/PicrossHD.html".  I picked that URL so when the user hits the done button they will be taken to the webpage for PicrossHD, when run from an external browser.  However, when run from within the App, we close the UIWebView.

Conclusion


This will go live soon, and we are excited to get this in the hands of our new users. I hope we can teach more people how to Play Picross HD and hopefully they will like it.

Please feel free to follow me on twitter at @fivelakesstudio. I would love to hear about your experiences on how to onboard people to your app. Let me know if you found this useful, and especially if you now understand how to play Picross HD.

Thanks for reading and be sure to visit us at Five Lakes Studio. I should mention that I also work for Techsmith, the makers of Snagit and Camtasia.

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