Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/151181
Title: Towards Simulated Morality Systems: Role-Playing Games as Artificial Societies
Author: Casas-Roma, Joan  
Nelson, Mark J.
Arnedo-Moreno, Joan  
Gaudl, Swen  
Saunders, Rob  
Citation: Casas-Roma, J., Nelson, M., Arnedo, J., Gaudl, S. & Saunders, R. (2019). Towards Simulated Morality Systems: Role-Playing Games as Artificial Societies. In Luc Steels & Jaap van den Herik & Ana Rocha (ed.). Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Agents and Artificial Intelligence (p. 244-251). Prague: SciTePress doi: 10.5220/0007496702440251
Abstract: Computer role-playing games (RPGs) often include a simulated morality system as a core design element. Games’ morality systems can include both god’s eye view aspects, in which certain actions are inherently judged by the simulated world to be good or evil, as well as social simulations, in which non-player characters (NPCs) react to judgments of the player’s and each others’ activities. Games with a larger amount of social simulation have clear affinities to multi-agent systems (MAS) research on artificial societies. They differ in a number of key respects, however, due to a mixture of pragmatic game-design considerations and their typically strong embeddedness in narrative arcs, resulting in many important aspects of moral systems being represented using explicitly scripted scenarios rather than through agent-based simulations. In this position paper, we argue that these similarities and differences make RPGs a promising challenge domain for MAS research, highlighting features such as moral dilemmas situated in more organic settings than seen in game-theoretic models of social dilemmas, and heterogeneous representations of morality that use both moral calculus systems and social simulation. We illustrate some possible approaches using a case study of the morality systems in the game The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion.
Keywords: role-playing games
multi-agent systems
morality systems
artificial societies
DOI: http://doi.org/10.5220/0007496702440251
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Issue Date: 2019
Publication license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/  
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