Helping locals rediscover Boston through a weekly game grounded in WBUR’s journalism and voice

ROLE

Product Designer

COLLABORATORS

Mustafa Taibah (Designer)

Ying Chen (Designer)

TIMELINE

Jan-May 2024

DISCIPLINES

Visual Design

User Research

Prototyping

CONTEXT

Field Guide

Boston’s national public radio station, WBUR launched a new online resource for Bostonians called the Field Guide. With this new resource, WBUR is looking to create a Field Guide focused weekly game, centered around the concept of living and exploring Boston.

HMW

How Might We provide an interest into the Field Guide through informing Bostonians on new places to explore?

THE SOLUTION

Boston Insider is a game that both challenges Bostonians to see whether they really know their city but also brings to light new places newcomers can go to explore.

RESEARCH AND USER INTERVIEWS

Asking questions to learn their...

πŸ’ͺ Motivations

Why are people interested in consuming local news content?

πŸ’¬ Expectations

How do people expect a location-based game to look like?

πŸ” Habits

What kinds of games do they like/ interact with and how often?

KEY INSIGHTS

Users want a fast and easy experience

Users are looking for games that don't take long

Users need a game that slowly introduces them to the field guide

Users like sharing their game results to their friends/family

Users feel discouraged if the game is too hard or technical

LOFI WIREFRAMES

Generating a few principles to guide our game brainstorm

⚑️ Quick

Provide an experience to users that does not add too much time to their daily routine

😌 Easy

Encourage users to come back and play the game through the desire to win again

✨ Enticing

Remain engaging so users will revisit the game without it becoming boring and tiresome

With our three game options, I evaluated them against the product principles and contributed this in our discussions with the clients.

.

Quick

Easy

Enticing

Option 1

Solve the Puzzle

🟑 Dependent on the number of pieces of the puzzle, ~10 minutes

🟑 Could prove to be difficult if users are not familiar with the location

🟑 Solving a puzzle to get to an answer may not be fun after a while

Option 2

Guess the Location

🟒 One question, multiple choice, ~3 minutes

🟒 Easy, users either get it wrong or right

🟑 May not be compelling for users to play

Option 3

Identify the Transportation

🟑 Number of questions dependent on how far the location is ~15 minutes

πŸ”΄ Hard, users may not be familiar with the Boston transportation

🟒 A fun way to learn more about how to navigate Boston

The clients had interest in Option 1 and Option 2 but agreed that Option 3 would be too difficult to implement and hard for users to understand, as a result, scratching the option.

USABILITY TESTING

Only one can remain…

With two options that clients were interested in pursuing, our team flushed out both designs and leaned in with usability testing to determine which of the two games our target audience would prefer playing.

DESIGN DECISIONS

Should I sign in now?

Initially registration screens were added to the beginning of the experience, but we soon realized that users felt that it delayed their gaming experience

We switched the flow of the registration towards after the user plays the game, giving them the option to sign in to save their scores

DESIGN DECISIONS

How can we make the game look more exciting?

We received feedback from interviewees that the first screen of the game did not feel exciting and had too much information.

With this feedback, I created a simpler interface that had clear CTA buttons that moved users forward with the game.

TAKEAWAYS

🫢 Less is more

πŸ’­ Look to debunk assumptions

πŸ§‘β€πŸ€β€πŸ§‘ Teamwork