[It’s time for anotherMonthly Musing— the monthly community blog theme that provides readers with a chance to get their articles and discussions printed on the frontpage. — CTZ]

It’s a sad truth of the gaming world that the our learningabouta game tends to end on shipping day. Before then, we are practically drowned in the deluge of previews, screenshots, demos, trailers, quick looks, hands-onandhands-off observations, openandclosed betas, cheesy marketing-directed developer diaries, and “exclusive” early reviews.

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But after “Day One”? Silence. Further coverage is left to the musings, retrospectives, forums, post-mortem features and late “due diligence” (a.k.a. They-Didn’t-Give-Us-A-Review-Copy-So-We-Had-To-Go-Buy-One) evaluations. The endlessly shifting focus on the Next Big Thing robs the gaming public of opportunities to learn just a little more about they love to play. Developers in turn lose the chance to help their most receptive, willing audience trulyunderstandthese things that took months or years of blood, sweat and toil to materialize.

And while a game should be able to explain itself through play, a typical gamer is unlikely to share the same perspective as a developer. As such, the reasoning behind any one design decision isn’t always clear. It’s all the more important then, that every opportunity to educate the audience must be exploited, lest the question“what the hell were those goddamn devsTHINKINGwhen they made this stupid f’in thing?!”be left unanswered. Previews and pre-release hype can only do so much. What’s really needed is after-the-fact education, the clarity of retrospective, for players to come closer to getting the message devs hoped to send.Those opportunities are the ones that lie untaken. Devs everywhere have tried and tried, with easter egg “developer rooms” hidden in old JRPGs, marketing-infused “behind-the-scenes” footage, and art galleries, but few actually get even the most enthusiastic fans to listen. Why bother watching all these boring movies when we could — of course — beplayingthe damn games?! Games should be played, movies watched, and we don’t play games to watch movies. Even the longest, mostXenosaga-esque cutscenes at least happen in-game.

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

Do you see now where I’m going with this, developers? The best way to get players to know what you went through is to get them toplaywhat you toiled over while youtell them what you went throughto bring them that experience. Doing that, you can point out the tiny details that they’d otherwise ignore, virtually asking them“See what I did there? Innit awesome?For players, they gain a deeper understanding of the games they love and greater awareness of the developers who made them. They see just how much thought, love, and care goes into every decision made, the kinds of technical leaps needed to make a gamejust right. Theyget it, finally. They’ll knowwhy those sidewalks were so narrow.

As seems to be the case in so many other things, Valve has helped pave the way into this unexplored space. Activating “commentary mode” in Valve’s variousOrange Boxtitles (andLeft 4 Dead) lets players play a level of the game as always, except with “commentary nodes” littered about the geography. Using nodes plays a short audio clip of a designer explaining a given decision or process in the game. That might not sound like much, but when you think about it, it’s puregenius, allowing gamers to see a game the way the developers hoped you’d see it, rather than through a personal lens occasionally blurred by cynicism, prior experience, and occasional fanboyism.

BO7 key art

Nodes fill various purposes. Some give you a glimpse of things you’d never be able to find out on your own, such as having the delightful Ellen McLain tell players about how she went about voicing GLaDOS, one of the most compelling, memorable characters ever designed:

Others, such as those inHalf-Life 2: Episode One,show you things you might have otherwise missed in the chaos of play:

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Still others answer the big “what the hell were we thinking” question:

Letting players see just how hard you worked to make your game can get them to see supposedly “overrated” material in a new (and positive) light. Maybe someday those contrarians might realize why you deserve the praise you’re getting, and that those high scores were hard-won. A wise man once said that “knowing is half the battle,” and getting players to know about what you did gets you one step further to getting them to appreciate it, and perhaps even love you for it.

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