Gaming, Social Media, Incentivization and Feeling a Sense of Accomplishment

in #life7 years ago

I often come across discussions that refer to "Game Theory" and how it applies to life.

In many ways, Game Theory is part of the "engine" that makes a community like Steemit work — creating a system of incentives and disincentives as a sort of "code" for interaction through which we all "play" the game of social media.

The such code works, the game rises to its highest and best state; when the code of flawed, the game becomes inconsistent and often unfair. 

Interestingly enough, Game Theory has its roots in economic modeling, not in game play.

Games and a Recent Memory

A while back (like maybe a decade ago), I was fairly active on a large gaming site that had lots and lots "arcade" type games you could play both for fun and for money.

Daisy
A solitary daisy

This included multi-player leagues and weekly "multiplier" games that might have 1000's of participants. In the "for pay" games, you might have an entry fee of $1.00, and you could enter and participate as many times as you wanted. 

The entry fees would then become the prize money pool; in some games, in some weeks, the prize pool could grow to as much as $10,000, $20,000 or even $50,000 for a single multi-player game!

What made it cool, though was that — in its original format — the prize pool would be divvied out among the top 25% of the participant field. Which meant that anyone who had "a really good day" (even if they were not an "elite" player) most likely would win a cash prize. It might only be $2.50 against your $1.00 entry fee, but still... you WON SOMETHING!

Then — for reasons only known to the game site management (but probably relating to being able to announce bigger first prizes) — the prize structure was changed. The same games were held; but now the payout was limited to 1st, 2nd and 3rd place. 

So before, you had maybe 2,500 players "in the money" in a 10,000 player field, now you had three players in the money in the same size field. 

Incentives and DIS-incentives

At that point I cashed out my accumulated winnings (no big deal, a few hundred dollars) and left the money games for good.

Poppy
California Poppy

From my perspective there was no longer an incentive to participate in the money games; I was not elite enough to be top three in such a field. I might be top-50 or even top-25 now and then, but that was about as good as I was. So why bother?

I didn't abandon the site; however, I only played the "free" games from that point on.

Somewhat to my surprise, my occasional checks on the money leagues showed little change in the number of entrants on the cumulative games. Somehow, the lure of a BIGGER first prize kept ever more people spending money on entry fees and laboring towards a prize they could never hope to get.

My point of telling this story is to illustrate a couple of points about both Human Nature, and the nature of this community we call Steemit.

Where Reality meets Wishful Thinking

Point one is that Game Theory is ultimately very complex and human beings tend to be unpredictable... and often out of touch with reality.

ScotchBroom
Scotch Broom

Point two is that people have different approaches.

My personal approach to any kind of "game play" revolves around "playing the averages." I don't care about the size of any given "prize" or "incentive;" the only thing I really care about is the educated analysis of my realistic likelihood of ending up with a net gain.

Many people — perhaps MOST people — see only the hype surrounding the size of the prize and pay almost no mind to whether or not they actually might win. In their mind, it's not only imminently likely that they will win... they feel sincere disappointment when they don't. It's what I call "The Lottery Effect;" people throwing common sense out the window in favor of adopting "wishful thinking."

Maybe that sounds silly, but it's this particular human trait (or "cognitive blind spot," if you will) that fuels a US $450 billion gambling industry. 

Steemit and "The Lottery Effect"

So let's get back to our lovely community for a moment and view it in the context of ultimately representing the gamification of social content. 

CherryBlossom
Last of the Cherry Blossoms

Not a day goes by that doesn't involve someone — or some "group" — getting up in arms because something on Steemit (usually relating to rewards) is somehow unfair and unjust. 

Now, whereas SOME things on Steemit definitely fit under that heading of unfairness, the vast majority of complaints can be filed under the general heading of Unrealistic Expectations.

Every day, thousands of people create what's basically somewhat sketchy posts and fully expect that they will end up in the Trending feed with $500.00 in rewards. And they feel authentically disappointed and disillusioned when that doesn't happen. 

Of course, this isn't limited to Steemit; hundreds of thousands of people authentically believe they belong on "The Voice" or "American Idol" when they actually can't sing their way out of a bag. 

Of course, we could have a long philosophical discussion of whether this is simply the noble human trait of "Hope," or a bad case of "wishful thinking," but — for brevity's sake — that's for another post!

Participation... and Accomplishment

To bring this ramble to a sort of orderly close, I find myself looking at Game Theory in the context of whether participants are left with a sense of accomplishment.

Narcissus
Narcissus in bloom

To that end, people are very different.

When I was on that gaming site, I felt a sense of accomplishment, every time I won even a modest prize... and that kept me coming back. When it became evident that I would get absolutely nothing for my efforts — regardless of the promise of a "$25,000 First Prize!!!" — I became a non-participant.

On Steemit, I feel a sense of accomplishment when one of my posts inspires active discussion and "audience participation," and that eventually may lead to my getting a few Steem Dollars as a reward. I feel a sense of accomplishment when my SP balance ticks up a couple more notches. 

And that keeps me coming back. 

I don't hitch my wagon (so to speak) to any idea that my posts "should be" or "belong" in the Trending feed. If that happens, it would be a lovely surprise, no more (truth in disclosure: I have had two posts "organically" reach Trending in 16 months) and I have no investment in that reality.

But — as I said — People are very different!

How About YOU? Do you experience Steemit — and other aspects of life — as a game? In looking at your life, what are the best incentives, for you? As a Steemit contributor, what are the incentives that keep you coming back? No judgment if you just say "the money," but in what SENSE? Is it the POSSIBILITY that you could have a $500 post, or the CHALLENGE of making $3 on every post? Or something different? What "fuels" you; what "powers" you? Conversely, what causes you to give up and quit something? Leave a comment-- share your experiences-- be part of the conversation!


created by @zord189

(As usual, all text and images by the author, unless otherwise credited. This is original content, created expressly for Steemit)
Created at 180514 15:08 PDT

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In a sense that my hobby is gaming and I blog about gaming where I hope to at least break even (maybe one day). At least for me that would be winning here on steemit. I get to convert fiat money that I’ve already spent or will spend on future games into experience that I than get cryptocurrency out of for blogging. Even better I could exchange that to get more games even here more locally on steemit. Which means 0 transactions fees both ways! Is that winning or is that WINNING? I have no idea. That for now is what keeps me going.

Many seem to play steemit as a game. This place is at least a very deep maze with lots of hidden paths and traps. Some choose to venture very deep into that maze while others just enjoy the outskirts of it.

I do like the maze analogy. For me, Steemit is largely about "breaking even" as well... in the sense that I love to write and do the online social interaction thing, but I have typically never been able to justify participating much, as working "for money" was a necessity.

Here, I can explore writing and blogging in various forms and build a social media base... and the "ROI" allows me to spend time here, rather than having to give that same time to some 15-hour a week part time job.

And that's definitely WINNING.

I like your comparison with a maze. Deep maze, like real life.

Those who persistently complain about "unfairness" should stop complaining and join in investing millions of dollars into the system like the whales they envy. Only then would they find the result they desire

Wise words there, @penking! Sadly, most people would rather live in their (incorrect) imaginations than deal with the world as it actually is.

What you described in your gaming experience with that one site, is an apt description of the change around 1980 in American-style capitalism. It went from "building a middle class" to "winner take all" and has not changed since.

Universal basic income seeks to reverse that trend. I believe that in the long run, cryptocurrency will reverse that trend because the power to create money will inevitably be distributed. People will have choices, just like the choice you made to stop using that gaming site once they went, "winner take all".

I have a sincere hope that Steemit will help to reverse that trend, too. I have seen evidence that the developers are working to flatten the distribution curve so that everyone has a chance to earn something from this new form of social media.

As to myself, I love to write anyway, and I'm not planning on stopping anytime soon. As my experience grows and the days go by, I am seeing Steemit as more of a challenge that I want to crack than a long series of defeats with no hope of winning. I'm not even sure it's a question of winning as it is a question of collaboration.

I believe that with persistent effort over time, with engagement, with writing quality content and with networking with people of like mind, I will eventually prosper nicely.

I don't know if there is any other way. I can cite a few examples of people who saw the opportunity when Steem was cheap (<10 cents) and piled up a bunch of Steem along the way. They worked hard to build their audiences and now they're well established here.

For me, I have sufficient determination, but I don't know just how to go about it yet. That is what I will discover with enough time and patience. That's why I'm still here.

That is definitely a fact. The days when someone starting a local hardware store and "doing well" in their community was regarded as "success" has come and gone. The days of the local high school student who was a star golfer becoming the pro at the local golf course and it was regarded as "success" are also gone.

This whole "winner take all" mindset is also psychologically destructive because it also creates a dynamic in which there not only is ONE winner, but everybody else walks away feeling like a LOSER. And that gradually chips away at your psyche, and (I believe) can probably track to the increasing subtext of RAGE we see in society.

UBI may definitely be a solution to counter the situation; the question is where will it come from? The factory owners who replace some Joe Schmoe with a robot isn't about to give up the incremental profit from no longer having to pay Joe to make toasters.

As for Steemit, I believe one of the essential components here is "patience." Whenever someone is whining a lot, it's almost always some "short term issue." And often tied to unrealistic expectations ("I quit my job to blog full time...") that basically supplies evidence of individual poor judgment, not flaws in the system.

I was here and blogging daily through 7-cent Steem when many people either outright STOPPED, or they were singing the doomsday song that it was "the end of Steemit." And yet? Here I am.

I think you have the right approach, from your description... just keep plugging away at it. In the end, consistency will probably win the day.

Many people — perhaps MOST people — see only the hype surrounding the size of the prize and pay almost no mind to whether or not they actually might win.

Bidbots have the allure to buy votes to make high payouts, and this gets into most of the ppl who use them...

Speaking of gambling... that's how Steem was designed, it says it int he white paper:

The economic effect of this is similar to a lottery where people overestimate their probability of getting
votes and thus do more work than the expected value of their reward and thereby maximize the total
amount of work performed in service of the community. The fact that everyone “wins something” plays
on the same psychology that casinos use to keep people gambling. In other words, small rewards help
reinforce the idea that it is possible to earn bigger rewards.

We are all crabs in a bucket like the white paper says, trying to keep each other down and stuck :/

I guess I have tended to have a pretty pragmatic approach to life...

Back in "another life" I almost went on the pro golf tour when I was 20. I was good enough to be somewhat competitive, but I never had any vision of being some great champion or "the best;" I just saw it as (possibly) doing something I enjoyed and getting paid for it. I saw the pro tour as the potential to just try to "place" every week and maybe make $2000 a week during the "season" as a result of being "decent" at it. "Winning" was never part of the picture.

As it happened, life circumstances eliminated that particular life path... however, the underlying approach to life has always remained; it even applies to what I do here on Steemit; I participate persistently, do my best, might be "top-500" in the community and feel grateful when that translates into a $20 post.

I've heard the "crabs in a bucket" thing before and generally reject it; my version is more like "If I can have it, I can help YOU have it, too."

I know. It's very UN-American and UN-Capitalistic of me...

We are all crabs in a bucket like the white paper says, trying to keep each other down and stuck :/

...thanks for destroying my romantic vision of steemit!
😂😂

I think the whole of life is a game but whether I experience it as such is another matter. it depends on my mood. I'm more likely to experience the playfulness of the game when things are going my way and not at all likely to experience that when I'm feeling hard down by. Same with Steemit really.

If I stop and think about Steemit I don't think it will survive but I choose to ignore that since I enjoy the day to day interactions.

What keeps me coming back is the social aspects of the platform and, to a lesser extent because I don't believe it will happen, the chance that I might make some good money here.

I have met some really interesting people both virtually and in real life, as a result of being on Steemit and that's hugely valuable to me.

I want to give up when I focus on the inequality here and the sheer amount of crap that gets posted and rewarded and the seemingly endless spam accounts that get created.

However, there's always another fun/interesting conversation to be had and that keeps me going.

So far, Steemit has proven me wrong on a number of occasions.

For one, it has much greater resilience because we get paid in Steem, not in fiat... and the "lure" of being able to accumulate wealth/equity (SP) rather than just "make money" does drive a good number of people.

The second surprise is the degree to which "self-policing" (and community policing) happens here. Someone starts abusing the system, and immediately groups self-organize to counter that. Whether that is coincidence or genius in design, I am not sure. But it is working, so far.

Even in my introductory post, I shared my doubts that Steemit could sustain for any period of time, and that has (so far) proven wrong.

The fact that we self-organize into subcommunities of friends, according to our interests and objectives also speaks well of the future.

I love your positivity with it all @denmarkguy. I suppose it's a question of focus. Interesting to hear that you're surprised it lasted this long. At least I think that's what I think you're saying.

And you're right. There are a lot of positive initiatives going on to counteract the crap. Hopefully they will be successful! 😁

@denmarky really great post with a lot of quality insight. Thank you.

I align myself more with your Mentality. Iam not looking to be rich here on Steemit. I enjoy producing Content and stirring up Discussion.

And when I do see some Rewards it's satisfying and motivates me to continue on. But I wouldn't continue on if I did not have that initial Passion of letting my Voice be heard via blogging on this Platform.

I just can't imagine how tough it must be for those Steemians who look at Posting as total drudgery. And then as a slap in the face for their hard laborious work get a few Steem dollars.

I sure wouldn't be here long if that was me

Something I didn't include in the post, but which is definitely also a consideration for me is that I love writing, but in order to justify spending the time with it I do... it has to be monetized, in some way.

What I love about Steemit is that I never have to worry about things like Google arbitrarily deciding that some opinion I share on a blog is against their TOS, and then suddenly my AdSense account is yanked. Boom, income stream gone. I also don't have to worry about YouTube or Facebook "censoring" because some opinion offends someone. Yes, I know I could get my post flagged here, but it's not just a total shut down.

That's definitely on my "likes" list about Steemit.

As for the people who experience posting as drudgery, I'm inclined to say they are doing the wrong thing. Nobody forces them to be here, and there are a bajillion other ways to make money that doesn't involve posting to social media.

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This can be a good comparison if you understand the game primarily. Yes, sometimes there are all kinds of unfairness, but I'm always aware why I'm here, because of my passion for photography and the place where I pay for it...
Have a great day :)

Sometimes, perhaps "unfairness" is merely a matter of our individual interpretations. What is unfair to one, is not to another.

You have a very clear sense of your purpose here, and I think that's definitely a positive.

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