Magic: The Gathering Drive to Work Podcast - #529: 20 Lessons: Creativity
Episode Date: April 20, 2018This is part eighteen of my series "20 Lessons, 20 Podcasts" based on my 2016 Game Developers Conference talk. In this podcast, I explain why restrictions breed creativity. ...
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I'm pulling up my driveway. We all know what that means. It's time for the drive to work.
Okay, so today is another in my series, 20 Lessons, 20 Podcasts, based on my GDC talk of 2016.
So I'm up to lesson number 18, Restrictions Breed Creativity.
So a quick caveat, this is probably the lesson I'm most associated with.
And as such, it is definitely a topic that I broach quite a number of times on my podcast.
So for regular listeners, I'm going to talk about some stuff that I know I've talked about before.
But a lot, this series gets a lot of listening from game designers that aren't necessarily Magic players.
So I'm going to talk about some stuff.
So just a heads up that I know I've hit some of these themes before, because I'm talking about something
that means a lot to me, and I've talked a lot about. Okay, so restrictions
breed creativity. So, let me start, as I always
do on these things, with an example from magic. So,
I write a column called Making Magic. Every
Monday since 2002, I've been writing this column.
I think I'm up to my 850th column.
And so one of the things, when we started writing the column,
we had this thing.
Things have changed a little bit since then.
But we first started, the way it worked was,
every other week was a theme week.
And then every other week from that was
not a theme week.
So on theme weeks, I would always write to the theme and then on non-theme weeks, I could
write whatever I wanted.
So the question was, which was harder, writing for the theme weeks or writing for the non-theme
weeks?
And the answer was the non-theme weeks were significantly harder,
significantly harder. And it gets to the crux of what this whole topic today is about,
which is there's this myth about creativity that being open, having choices makes you
more creative. That what a creative mind wants is infinite possibilities. And the funny thing is
that's not really how the brain works. That is not, like when I had my theme week, when I knew
what my theme week was, I go, okay, and I had to figure out what I was doing, but I would work
within the theme week. And when I didn't have my theme weeks, when I could do anything, that was
infinitely harder.
You know what I'm saying?
And in fact, a lot of times I would sort of try to find something.
I would give myself some limitations to help myself.
So let me talk a little bit about creativity and about sort of... Once again, I did an entire podcast on creativity.
I wrote an article online called Connect the Dots, where I talk about what
I believe creativity is. And my whole idea on creativity is, it's the ability to connect things
that other people don't see as connected. That's what I believe creativity is. And I believe it's
a skill that, it's a muscle that you get better with use. But we'll get to there in a second.
So let's talk a little bit about brain chemistry,
because this will explain a lot about what's going on here.
Okay, so why is it easier if you have something than if you don't have something?
And let me talk about that.
So, okay.
So the way the brain works is the brain is a really smart organ.
That it really, it is the smart organ. That it really,
it is the smartest organ.
So what happens is,
whenever your brain
sees a problem,
meets a problem,
it goes in its databanks
and goes,
wait, wait, wait, wait.
Have I dealt with this problem before?
Let me look it up.
And if it has,
then it uses the things
it used last time.
Now, most of the time,
this is really, really good.
That if I want to solve a problem, and I solve it,
next time I go to solve the problem,
if I've already solved it,
I don't want my brain to start from scratch again.
I want my brain to use the knowledge I've learned before.
So if I don't know how to do something,
and I learn how to do it,
the next time I'm trying to face that thing,
my brain goes, whoa, whoa, I got this.
I know how to do this. Now, most I'm trying to face that thing, my brain goes, whoa, whoa, I got this. I know how to do this.
Now, most of the time, that's really good.
The brain functioning that way is really helpful.
There's no reason why you should relearn something you already know.
But, and this is the problem for creativity, is because of this technique of your brain
to sort of make things easier by reusing pathways,
what happens is if you approach a problem that you've already approached before,
your brain, its natural thing to do is approach it from the exact same way,
literally with the same neural pathways.
Now, the problem there is it gets you to the same answer.
Now, normally that's a good thing.
If I want to know how to do something, if I'm trying to figure out how to cook something
or whatever I'm trying to do,
if I'm trying to learn how to do it,
I want to come to the same conclusion.
I want to go, oh, this is the way to do it.
With creative thought, though,
it's the one place where it's a problem.
If I'm trying to come up with something different
and my brain keeps wanting to come up
with some place that's the same,
well, that causes a problem.
And so one of the things that often happens when you're trying to do game design is if
you approach your problems from the same vantage point, you get the same answers.
And the thing that's even, I guess, about this that's subtler is it's not that you're
even aware necessarily that you're using the same neural pathways.
When I explain it, when I say, well, here's how the brain works,
and you sit back and you go, oh, yeah, yeah, that makes sense.
But when you think about how, like, one of the things that's very interesting is
figuring out when what you do, which makes sense in most places, doesn't make sense somewhere.
So, for example, yeah, yeah, yeah, most of the time when I want to learn how to do something,
I want to build on experience from before.
But what happens in creative thought is it just means, I want to build on experience from before.
But what happens in creative thought is it just means that I keep coming up with the same answers.
And when your goal is to come up with new answers, that can be very frustrating.
So the way, really what this means is that if you want to be creative,
you have to understand the limitations of your brain.
Or not even the limitations as much as the nature of your brain.
So the trick here is if you want to be creative, what that means is you have to get in the habit of learning to give your brain different stimuli.
So let me use magic as my example.
I right now am working on,
it's a code named Cricket.
And I'm, yeah, I'm working on Cricket.
I'm, in fact, doing exposure design on diving.
And a lot of what's going on is,
and I've, you know, this is my 25th set, 30th set.
I don't know.
I've led a lot of sets.
You know, I think I've led I've led a lot of sets. I think I've led about 25-ish sets.
So how is it my 25 sets are different from one another?
Well, there's a couple factors.
The biggest is one of the things I do whenever I'm making a new set is I try to figure out something to do that I haven't done before.
I try to give myself a goal that's a unique goal for that set.
So, for example,
when I do a top-down set,
meaning I am influenced by some flavor,
well, if I've never done that before,
if this is the first time I've ever tried to make
Greek mythology or Gothic horror
or, you know, whatever top-down theme I'm doing,
right off the bat, I'm like, okay.
You know, the first thing I do on top-down sets is
I make a list of all the things that that thing would want.
So right off the bat, well, I haven't done that before.
Now, sometimes I'm doing what we call bottoms-up,
which is a mechanical-based thing, not a flavor-based.
And then it's like, okay.
Like, for example, Ravnica came about
because we were doing our second- ever block dedicated to multicolor.
So I literally said, well, what does the last block make you do?
And the answer was, play lots of colors.
So I was like, okay, let's do the opposite.
Let's play as few colors as possible while still being multicolor, which meant two color.
You know, that I sort of found that space by pushing against where I'd been before.
So whenever I start a set,
one of the things that I always try to do is
I try to make sure that I'm just,
I just have a different goal in mind.
I'm just trying to do something different.
Another big thing I do is we have design teams.
I try hard not to have the same design teams, that I want different stimuli coming in.
That, for example, that just having different people means I'm going to get different questions.
I'm going to get different input.
I'm going to get different designs.
The part of the way that I make sense different is just having different people getting involved
in it.
Another common thing I will do is that I try to push in
certain directions. I like to give a bull's eye. So one of the big things I believe
about leading a design is that you, the person in charge of the design, are
trying to give direction to your designers. You are trying to make a
bull's eye to aim for. Now be aware that just because you aim
at one thing at one point doesn't mean that's always where you're aiming. But it's good that
the people on your design team, your designers, have a direction. That they know what they're
trying to accomplish. And a lot of what I'm talking about today is I want to make sure that
my goal is a unique goal and that I have a unique set of people that I'm doing that with so that I'm trying to do something I haven't done
before.
And the big thing about sort of understanding this is that I think people falsely believe
that the limitations themselves will inhibit creativity.
that the limitations themselves will inhibit creativity.
That, you know, if I have neat creative ideas,
that, um... Sorry, I won't take a drink for a second.
That having outside limitations would somehow hamper it.
Like, the idea essentially is, within me, I have this, you know...
They used to talk about when they do sculpture,
I think Michelangelo believed that
the thing he was sculpting was already in the marble.
He was just freeing it from the marble.
I think there's people that believe that, like,
you have these great ideas,
and just you have to find the great ideas.
And the reality is an actual sort of...
Sorry.
One more drink. Sorry.
Sorry.
One more drink.
Sorry.
I think there's this false belief sometimes that the idea already exists and all you are doing is discovering it.
And that any limitations you do might pull you away from finding this beautiful piece of art trapped in, you know, in limbo.
And the reality is that it is these restrictions, it is these ideas that you tend to build off of.
So I'm going to compare the making of an idea
to an oyster.
Sorry. I'm getting in the way of my
thoughts. Okay, so the way of my thoughts.
Okay, so the way an oyster gets made, for those that don't know,
is a clam will get a piece of sand or something in it.
And the irritants will form.
It'll make a little whatever the pearl stuff is.
But it starts forming around it.
And then actually a pearl is something that sort of, there was some irritation
and it was dealing with the irritation and slowly sort of creates this thing.
And essentially the funny thing is I don't think the role of the clam
was to make pearls per se. It's not like
I hope, oysters. Do oysters make pearls? Sorry, oysters make pearls, not clams.
Oysters. The oysters make pearls? Sorry, oysters make pearls, not clams. Oysters.
The goal of pearls wasn't necessarily,
like, the oyster didn't exist to make the pearl per se,
that the pearl was a byproduct of it trying to do something.
And that a lot of great ideas are a lot like
that little grain of sand to make the pearl,
which is you get something in your craw
and you try to sort of work around it
and that thing inspires things.
Like,
a lot of great inspirations for me
have come about when I
was trying to sort of solve a problem
and it was, like, elegant
solutions, I call them, are a lot
of where the great, a lot of
the Thunderbolt moments are
not that I had this idea out of
nowhere, it's I found, I had a problem I was trying to solve and the elegant solution came
to me.
And I think a lot of creative, a lot of creativity is in fact elegant problem solving.
It's I need to do something, I need to find a solution to this, I can't find an obvious
solution and then I find a non-obvious solution, but something that makes me realize,
oh, if I think of it in this way, it opens it up and it gives me some new possibilities.
And like I said earlier, I believe creativity is the connecting of things that don't normally connect.
So a lot of cool sort of creative moments is, oh, here's something else I've learned in a completely different field
that you wouldn't think has anything to do with this,
but it does.
And if you think of it this way,
a lot of great insights
are applying things you've learned elsewhere
to a field that you haven't applied it to.
There's a great book
that I am completely blinking on the name right now
that talks a lot about how a lot of great scientific discoveries
were in fact people from one field bringing their expertise to a different field.
And saying, oh, well here's something we know is true in this field.
If we bring it to this field, you know, and the idea is, you know,
oh, because this is true in one area, is there some truth to it in another area?
From a writing standpoint, I've talked a lot about that.
One of the things that's very common is for writers to have a theme and that theme carries through their work.
And a lot of what makes different works is them taking their theme and applying it in different ways.
lot of what makes different works is them taking their theme and applying it in different ways.
And this idea of sort of you having ideas but crisscrossing, you know, hybriding the
ideas is where I think a lot of things come from.
But it is not this idea that I have nothing, that ideas come from nothing, that I just
spontaneously make an idea out of whole cloth.
That isn't really how the brain works.
It's not how ideas work.
Usually what happens is it's me forming around something
to try to figure that out.
So let me get to some practical advice today.
So what am I trying to say with this lesson?
Restrictions-free creativity.
What does that mean?
Okay, number one,
it means you want to bring restrictions into your work.
That restrictions are not a negative but a positive.
And what I mean by that is when you're building something,
understand that you having things that speak to you,
you having ideas to work around are a good idea.
That one of the, to me, the creative process is, there's a part early on where you're sifting through
ideas and then find something that speaks to you.
And it's not important that you understand why it speaks to you.
That's not even important necessarily.
It's just that something about it really makes you keep coming back to it.
That there's something about the concept that says, this interests
me. And then what I say is, bring those things
into your work. Things that just sort of gnaw at your consciousness.
That sort of like, there's something about this that really,
even if you don't understand why, really intrigues you.
Because a lot of creativity is building off of something.
And so if you start with a thing that just really interests you,
it will build toward interesting things.
The second thing is that I want you to understand this dynamic
because often in game design or any creative endeavor,
you'll get stuck.
You try to do something and you get in what I call the loop
where you sort of keep doing the same thing and getting the same answer
and it just gets frustrating because you just can't seem to break out of it.
So what I say there is another great way to use this is a very good trick,
which is sometimes when you're stuck, take a restriction that's not necessary, but put it in anyway.
So, for example, sometimes I'm trying to design cards and I'm just I keep designing the same thing.
So I'll just add a restriction. I'll just add a restriction.
And sometimes what I'll do is I'll add a crazy restriction, not even a nonsensical restriction.
crazy restriction. Not even a nonsensical restriction.
So I'm designing cards and I'm like, okay, okay, I'm going to be inspired by donuts. I'm going to design a card
that reminds me of a donut. Or I'm going to design a card that reminds me of
lacrosse. Or I'm going to design a card that reminds me of I Love Lucy.
I just pick something that is nothing to do with
what I'm doing.
Because what it forces me,
it forces my brain to do the thing I'm talking about.
I'm now thinking about my problem in a different context than I've ever thought before.
And then what happens is,
I can latch on to new things.
I can latch on to something different.
So, this concept allows you,
when you get stuck
as a tool to help you
I mean a lot of what
if you listen to a lot of my lessons and stuff
a lot of them is really about human nature
some of them is about understanding
human natures of your player base
but some of them are understanding
the human nature of you
the person making the game you the human nature of you, the person making
the game, you the game designer.
That you are human too, and you have the same foibles, and you will fall into the same traps
because there's a certain nature, humans work a certain way.
I'm trying to make you understand that when you get to creativity, when you get to sort
of artistic thought, that there are traps to fall into that are just human nature traps.
The brain is a wondrous thing.
The brain will do amazing things.
But any tool is only as good as the knowledge of the tool user.
And so one of the things about if you're going to be in a field where you're using your brain,
where your brain is your tool, you need to spend time
understanding it. Like, for example, if you're a dancer
and your body is your tool, you have to get much better at understanding your body.
I know a lot of dancing classes is about sort of, or even
acting classes, is about sort of getting you in touch with
connecting to your body and how you feel and when your body's telling you things to listen to and understand what it needs um
and i believe your brain is similar in that um i don't think a lot of people who spend time thinking
spend time understanding their own brain and that i believe that if you're going to sort of, if your brain is your tool, understand
your brain.
A lot of today is saying, look, there's things we know about the brain.
There's ways the brain works.
You know, there's things the brain wants to do.
And you, interestingly, being creative is not, from a species standpoint, you know, from a biological standpoint,
your brain's job is to keep you alive.
That's your brain's number one job.
And being creative is actually antithetical to a lot of things built into your brain.
For example, one of the things that you want to do to survive from a survival standpoint is you want to avoid risk.
Risk is bad.
Risk kills you.
That if you're going out and picking berries, you don't want to eat berries you've never eaten before.
You want to eat the berries you've eaten before and didn't die from.
And that your brain really has a lot of things built into it for survival.
You know, now we as a species have kind of got, you know, survival isn't our day-to-day thing anymore.
We don't wake up every day going, where am I getting my food?
I got my food. It's in the fridge.
You know, we've evolved past that.
But your brain, that's where it came from.
And you have to understand that your brain is not hardwired necessarily to want to be creative.
Now, there is reasons to problem solve, and problem solving is built into your brain.
So the tool, it's not as if the brain can't problem solve, because there are times and
places you need to problem solve.
What I'm saying is that your brain sort of at its core wants to do some things that sometimes
fight your desire when being a creative person.
And that you have to understand that.
You have to get that.
You have to realize that, like, your brain is going to say,
hey, you know how to do something?
Yeah, we know how to do that.
We've done it before.
Let's do it that way.
It's kind of funny.
One of the big conflicts I have in my job is I'm the head designer.
So there's someone called the rules manager.
There's been many people who have had the job.
And the goal of the rules manager
is to make things consistent.
That if we want to do something,
their job is to hunt for the template
we've already used
and try to find a way to do that.
But one of the problems is
my goal as head designer is
sometimes I'm trying to find novelty.
I'm trying to do things we haven't done.
And the last thing I want to do is take something that is exciting and new
and make it feel less exciting and less new.
But the rules manager's job is to do that.
And that one of the things I've come to realize is,
you know, early on I used to butt heads a little more with the rules manager.
And what I've come to understand is, look, the rules manager is doing their job.
And that if I can use a rules manager and understand what they want and what they do,
they're a tool for me.
The rules manager is not my foil.
I mean, I make fun of it like in the comics.
But really the rules manager is a tool for me.
But I've got to understand the tool.
And I have to understand the motivations of the tool. In some way, by the way, this is just rules manager is a tool for me, but I've got to understand the tool, and I have to understand the motivations
of the tool. In some way, by the way,
this is just how to deal with people in general.
People have a goal
in mind. They have things they prioritize,
and if you do not
understand their priorities, you will not understand
their interactions. If you want to interact
with people, which I guess is true of designers and your design
team, you want to understand what motivates
them. And a lot of what I'm saying a good designer is, is
understanding sort of making your team get what you want out of your design so that that's
what they are doing rather than some default that you're not putting. So let me give you
a different example of the same lesson today, but in a different context. So my wife and I, Laura's my wife,
we love throwing parties. I like making games. Laura loves cooking. We love doing planning
and stuff. We really enjoy parties. We do a couple of big parties every year. So there
was a period of time where all our friends were having babies and we were showing baby
showers. And what we learned really quickly was if we
wanted to throw a good baby shower, what we needed to do was ask the couple for a
theme. Because if we didn't give a theme, what ended up happening was generic
baby shower. And they all, they were, they were just all, they would all be the same.
Because when you say baby shower, what would you expect?
You keep getting the same thing.
And what we found was what we wanted to do was not just give a baby shower,
but do something specialized to the couple that was having the baby.
And so what we said is give us a theme.
And one of our friends said a carnival.
One of our friends said baseball.
One of our friends said a picnic.. One of our friends said baseball. One of our friends said a picnic.
Each people gave us different things
and from that we
ended up making
the crux of a
baby shower.
The things you do at a baby shower aren't that different.
You know what I'm saying? People are bringing gifts for the
baby. You're going to play some
games that are baby themed.
The things you're doing
aren't that different.
But all it took
was people giving us a theme
and all of a sudden
it just inspired
all sorts of things.
And not only that,
not only did it just give
decorations to the party and stuff,
it even impacted
the activities itself.
That we got to play
baby themed things
but through the filter
of whatever the theme was.
And what I found was I was just making more interesting games.
You know what I'm saying? Like, I was just, I was being inspired by the theme itself
and I was, as the person making the games, was making just
more interesting games. That when I was sort of like baby shower,
generic baby shower, I was just making the normal baby games.
But as soon as I had this, like, oh,
but I'm trying to incorporate a carnival, you know, or how do we make carnival games that are
baby games? All of a sudden, we're making physical games that we'd never done before.
You know, when we had the baseball theme, I said, okay, how can I make something that
combines baseball with babies? And I came up with a really interesting game where it was a trivia game that was a baseball game.
And it allowed me to sort of do some fun stuff
where I made things that I would never make.
And that is a lot of what I'm trying to say today is
your brain is capable of making all sorts of really cool things.
But it requires you, the user of the brain,
to understand the inputs to get the outputs you want.
And that if you put the same inputs,
you're just getting the same outputs.
That's just what's going to happen.
So the idea of using restrictions,
like my takeaway from today is
not even that restrictions have to exist.
Restrictions should exist.
You, the designer, should bring restrictions into your
design. That you should sort of force yourself to go to places you haven't gone because that very
act of doing that will lead to better design. It'll lead to richer design, more unique design.
It'll lead you to doing things. And I'll, I'll, I'll muster up, I'll leave one last example which to me is
a perfect example
which is
double-faced cards.
So that's something
that we do in Magic.
Normally in Magic
there is a front
to the card,
the face,
and there's a back
to the card.
And for many,
many years
every card had a front
and a back.
So we were working
in Innistrad,
a set that was
our Gothic horror set,
and we were trying
to figure out
how to do werewolves. And so what I said to my team is, I laid down parameters. I go, I want to do
werewolves. And I said, look, you know, there's two states to a werewolf. Got to reflect that.
You know, the moon's going to come out and the humans are going to turn into werewolf. And,
you know, I wanted two states. And I sort of laid out the things I needed.
And one of my team members came back with the idea of having a double-faced card.
We had done it in another game we make,
a game called Duel Masters.
We had done it,
and it was kind of exciting there.
And I said, oh, they do it in the other game.
We could do it here.
And at first, I mean, the story goes,
I've done podcasts of this.
I was reluctant.
But eventually, I mean, I tried it
because always you want to try things.
Even things you think won't work, you want to try.
Because you never know.
And what I found was, it turned out to be a wonderful solution.
It did really neat things.
And the audience adored it.
Not all the audience, but the vast majority adored it.
Any new idea that's a little out of the box, there's always people that say, I hate it.
But most people actually really liked it.
But the point is that the reason we got to double-faced cards wasn't us saying, what haven't we done before?
No.
What got us to double-faced cards is me saying, here is a very tight parameter I'm trying to solve.
And I made sure my design team understood the problem that we were solving.
And I laid out a lot of parameters.
There were a lot of restrictions.
We are doing werewolves. There are going to be two states.
There's going to be a human. There's going to be a werewolf.
Something's going to change them.
The moon's going to come out.
Here's all the things we have to represent.
And I said, I don't want to
just do an okay werewolf. I want to do
the noxious ox out werewolf.
It was something that Magic hadn't done very much
that I knew if we could capture would
really put this set on the map.
And Innistrad went on to be a hugely popular set.
Double-Faced Guards was hugely popular.
But it stemmed from, it's not like I said do anything and we got there.
I said do something specific, which is how we got there.
And that the best design is when you're looking for very specific answers and then being willing
to be creative in those answers.
So when you are designing your set,
when you're making your game,
when you're doing that,
restrictions breed creativity.
It is me telling you that your brain is a tool
that can help you greatly,
but you have to understand your tool and use it properly.
Because if you use your brain properly, you will get dividends, many, many dividends.
Your brain is capable of all sorts of wonderful ideas. But in order to get at those wonderful
ideas, you have to understand how it works and put the right input so you get the right
output. So anyway, I don't know how it works.
I hope that was fun for you today.
Like I said, I've been saying this forever.
I really, I'm a big believer in creativity.
I'm a big believer in understanding the brain and the brain psychology and how your neurons
fire and all that.
Because if you're using your brain, if that's the tool you use, understand your brain, understand
the tool.
And so today is just one.
I mean, I recommend even reading books on the brain and understanding.
I took a class in college that was all about how the brain perceives things.
That was a really amazing class.
Perception is important.
But anyway, that, my friends, is all I have to say today on restrictions, breathing, and creativity.
So anyway, thank you for joining me.
But I'm now at work.
So we all know
what that means.
It means it's the end
of my drive to work.
So instead of talking magic,
it's time for me
to be making magic.
I'll see you guys
all next time.
Bye-bye.