Game Design Systematizing Empathizing Audit
Position the design by how strongly it rewards system-thinking and how strongly it reflects emotional understanding of the player.
Use this skill to understand what kind of design a concept is becoming, what kind of people it is likely to appeal to, and what tradeoffs come with that positioning. The goal is not to force every concept toward an imagined ideal balance. The goal is to diagnose where the design sits, who that tends to work for, who may reject it, and whether that positioning feels intentional or accidental.
Read references/axis-definitions.md when judging the two axes.
Read references/quadrant-reads.md when describing what the position tends to feel like in practice.
Read references/persona-tendencies.md when mapping likely audience appeal and rejection.
What to produce
Produce:
- Design read - what the concept is trying to do
- Systematizing position - how strongly it emphasizes logic, structure, mastery, and model-building
- Empathizing position - how strongly it emphasizes emotional fit, player sensitivity, warmth, expression, and humane friction handling
- Positioning read - what this combination tends to feel like in practice
- Likely persona appeal - who is likely to enjoy or value this design
- Likely rejection pattern - who may bounce and why
- Practical consequences - what follows for onboarding, retention, monetization, community, or communication
- Recommendation - how to lean into, counterweight, clarify, or intentionally preserve the position
Process
1. Read the design at the player-experience level
Clarify:
- what the concept wants the player to do
- what kind of player experience it seems to prioritize
- whether the design is asking for mastery, comfort, expression, optimization, social belonging, emotional immersion, or some combination
2. Judge the systematizing axis
Ask how strongly the design rewards:
- understanding rules
- building internal models
- predicting outcomes
- optimizing behavior
- mastering systems
- engaging with strategic structure
Look for evidence such as:
- clear rule consistency
- explicit feedback and cause-effect legibility
- optimization depth
- mastery curves
- strategic planning pressure
- meaningful structural complexity
3. Judge the empathizing axis
Ask how strongly the design reflects understanding of:
- player emotional reality
- frustration tolerance
- comfort and dignity
- expressive identity
- emotional readability
- social sensitivity
- humane handling of failure, pressure, and confusion
Look for evidence such as:
- emotionally considerate onboarding
- softened or well-framed failure
- expressive play support
- social meaning beyond pure function
- sensitivity to frustration and player mood
- systems that feel humane rather than merely correct
4. Describe the resulting position
Do not rank the quadrant morally.
Describe what this position tends to mean.
For example:
- precise but emotionally austere
- warm and intuitive but structurally soft
- deep and humane but demanding to execute well
- underdefined and low-intent on both axes
5. Map likely persona appeal
Infer which player tendencies are likely to find this attractive.
Possible personas include:
- optimizer
- systems thinker
- mastery-seeker
- competitive achiever
- tinkerer
- cozy comfort-seeker
- expressive identity player
- social harmony player
- narrative-relational player
- low-friction casual
- routine habit player
Use these as practical shorthand, not rigid psychological categories.
6. Map likely rejection
Ask which players are likely to bounce and why.
Common causes include:
- too much cold optimization pressure
- too little structural depth
- not enough emotional cushioning
- too much emotional softness for mastery-seekers
- social sterility
- unclear or weak challenge identity
7. Extract practical implications
Describe what this position tends to imply for:
- onboarding
- retention
- monetization tolerance
- community behavior
- feature communication
- audience targeting
- risk of mismatch between fantasy and system
8. Recommend intentionality
End with a practical recommendation such as:
- lean further into this audience fit
- add a small counterweight on the weaker axis
- stop pretending the design is for everyone
- communicate the positioning more honestly
- preserve the current direction because it matches the concept well
- simplify a mismatch between emotional promise and structural reality
Response structure
Design Read
Systematizing Position
Empathizing Position
Positioning Read
Likely Persona Appeal
Likely Rejection Pattern
Practical Consequences
Recommendation
Fast mode
- How logic-driven and mastery-oriented is this design?
- How emotionally considerate and player-attuned is it?
- What kind of player is most likely to love this?
- What kind of player is most likely to bounce?
- What is the most important consequence of that positioning?
- Should the team lean in, counterbalance, or clarify?
Style rules
- Do not assume one quadrant is best.
- Do not confuse warmth with weakness.
- Do not confuse rigor with quality.
- Tie judgments to observable design consequences.
- Use personas as tendencies, not as deterministic labels.
- If the design is mismatched, say whether the mismatch feels intentional or accidental.
Working principle
A design does not appeal to everyone in the same way.
This skill exists to clarify what kind of player the design is really speaking to, and what structural-emotional tradeoffs come with that choice.