Life As a Game Simulation

Anuj Jain
4 min readJun 21, 2021
Photo by Lorenzo Herrera on Unsplash

Life Is a multiplayer game out in the market hard to pick a genre to categorize this game into. The gameplay differs from player to player, and in fact, it could change while you’re playing it. Unlike most, you cannot customize your character in the game. The skin color and other accessories available to you seem to be randomly determined. Plus, each player starts with vastly different powers — you can get any level of wealth, status when you begin. The game doesn’t pretend to be “equally fair” or have a “level playing field” for all players

As a player, when you start you could either be really disadvantaged or massively ahead of others — there’s no way to predict what you’ll get It’s been hard for me to find an interview with the game designers, but my guess is that they wanted to make an interesting game, not a fair one. If that was the goal, Life succeeds spectacularly. It throws all sorts of interesting challenges: — imagine trying to survive when you’re born with zero wealth, or not getting frustrated when you’re born with all powers filled up to the max already If I were to pick one defining game mechanic for Life, I’d pick uncertainty.

The game keeps on throwing surprises. So a useful tip to my fellow gamers is they should expect to constantly adapt to his/her surroundings and whatever else the game throws at you. On the subject of winning the game, Life has introduced several new innovations. First, the game doesn’t make it clear what does the player need to do to win it. ( it doesn’t even tell you how to play — the tutorials are useless).

Not knowing is frustrating at times, but I didn’t want to quit because on forums other players were discussing that the game has a bug where quitting deletes the game from the hard disk permanently. It’s a crazy bug, no? After playing the game for a while and getting frustrated with my lack of progress,

I noticed a countdown on the top-right of the screen. It quickly became obvious to me that no matter what I did or didn’t do, the countdown kept on decreasing. Initially, I thought this suggested that I had to reach someplace, or some level or beat someone else before the countdown gets to zero. But, of course, this was merely an interpretation because the game didn’t come with any instructions. I did some research to find out what was going on. On the game forums, amazingly, nobody had actually seen the countdown hit zero. Instead, the experienced users complained that the counter really had no significance. The majority opinion on the forum was that no matter what the countdown said, the game would quit suddenly and without warning (and then, of course, it gets deleted from the hard disk).

They felt cheated that all their effort into collecting powers went to waste when the game quit without warning them. They complained that all their careful plans of using these powers amounted to nothing. These users were quite frustrated by this feature/bug.

After reading such reviews, I decided to play the game a little differently. Knowing that I had paid dearly for the game and that it could end anytime, I stopped paying attention to the countdown and focused on having fun. I did things that were neither too tough (that I’d bang my head against the wall in frustration), not too easy (that I’d get bored out of my wits). Since I had no idea how long the game will last, I didn’t make long-range plans, and also didn’t engage in power collection. Instead, I solely focused on playing the game, one countdown unit after another. Yep, there have been moments of frustration and times when I wanted to do rage-quit.

But, overall, I think this game is a unique experience that’s worth having once. While other games have cheat codes that help you win, this game has none. While other games come with well-designed levels and logical gameplay, in this game almost you’ll be on your toes playing levels designed by other players’ and design your own levels for others to play While other games give you multiple lives and shallow replayability, this game can be played exactly once (and never again after that).

Some players like games with well-defined rules that they can master, but I like unpredictability, chaos, and surprise, and Life fits that bill perfectly. It’s available on all platforms and I recommend buying the authentic version (if you can afford a cup of coffee, you can afford the original copy. So don’t be a cheap pirate.) That’s all.

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Anuj Jain
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Just write my random thoughts while overthinking