Harry Potter: Wizards Unite

Harry Potter: Wizards Unite is an Augmented Reality game by Niantic in collaboration with WB Games and Portkey Games. Like its predecessor from the same company, Pokémon Go, it combines GPS location and a game world map along with the ability to set game events against a background image taken with the camera in the player's handheld device to provide an immersive experience overlaid on the real world.

https://www.harrypotterwizardsunite.com/


 * Addressing the Player: The player is the player character, and can put as much real information as they want onto their Ministry ID, along with their own photo.  Conditionally subverted as none of this is mandatory, and it's possible to use generic images instead of a photo -- and none of it is visible to others unless you choose to share it.  And almost entirely averted in game, as it rarely uses this information to directly address you.


 * Augmented Reality: Well, yeah.


 * Character Class System: An odd one.  Once you level up a couple of times you can choose one of three Professions:  Auror (strong against Dark forces, weak against Beasts), Magizoologist (strong against Beasts, weak against Curiosities) or Professor (strong against Curiosities, weak against Dark forces).  Each Profession also has a "lesson tree" in which to spend scrolls, spellbooks and restricted section books to improve statistics like Hit Points and various percentages like the chance to make a critical  hit.  Curiously, you are free to swap between them at will with little or nothing in the way of penalties.


 * Character Customization: To a limited degree at game start, including among other things the specifications of your wand and your house at Hogwarts.


 * Character Level: You have a primary Wizarding level, but you also have separate ranks in the various categories of Foundables you're pursuing, all of which are independent of your Profession.


 * Cosmetic Award: The Wizarding Achievements section of your Ministry ID, along with all the mods that can be applied to your ID photo.


 * Cut and Paste Environments: Appear when you turn off the AR features of the game.  All Confoundable fights occur against the same grass-and-forest background, and all Wizarding Challenges take place in the same dark stone room.


 * Drop-In Drop-Out Multiplayer: Wizarding challenges work along these lines.


 * Elemental Rock-Paper-Scissors: Sortakinda in play in the strengths and weaknesses of the Professions.


 * Enemy-Detecting Radar: You can only detect Confoundable Traces in your immediate vicinity, although that's surprisingly large.  However, the only things visible to you more than say 50 or 60 feet away are Wizarding buildings.  Curiously, your character emits a visible "ping" in the form of circles expanding from where he stands on the map, but it seems only to define how close you need to get to a building to use its function.  You can see -- and act on -- traces well beyond its maximum radius.


 * Experience Meter: Appears as a ring, around your photo/image on the main screen, and around your current level when gaining experience after encounters.  Rankings for the various categories of Foundables have horizontal progress bars that are only visible in the Registry, or when gaining rank experience.


 * Exposition Break: The pop-up passages that appear when you achieve certain goals, which advance the plot in the form of conversations with various individuals.


 * First-Person Ghost: The only part of your character you see outside of the map is the tip of your wand.


 * Fixed Camera: All actions outside of the map and the management screens are presented in a first-person point of view, with the camera (that of the device you're playing on) serving as your "eyes".  For reasons fundamental to the nature of an AR game, this cannot be changed.


 * Fragmented Hidden Object Game: Sortakinda.  Some of the Foundables scattered around the world, while appearing to be complete objects, are actually magically-created fragments.  You have to find all their parts -- anywhere from 3 to 12 -- before you have officially "recovered" them.


 * Hide Your Children: Averted, interestingly enough.  Some of the Foundables are time-shifted versions of the Harry Potter characters (from the period of the books) -- even as you speak with their adult selves on a regular basis.


 * Hit Points: Called "Endurance".


 * Idle Animation: The little monochrome wizard has about three moves he makes when you're not walking about and changing his position, including what looks like an accidental discharge from his wand.  Tapping him will make him wave at you.


 * Inexplicable Treasure Chests: Whenever you rank up in one of the categories of Foundables, a "treasure trunk" appears just long enough to discharge its contents into your metaphorical hands.


 * Infinite Stock for Sale: Other than special limited time offers, nothing you can buy on Diagon Alley appears to ever go out of stock.  Then again, you are more likely to fill up your inventories long long before you would realistically have bought out a merchant anyway.


 * Isometric Projection: The map screen is displayed in an adjustable isometric view.  Using the usual mobile "zoom in-zoom out" gestures will actually change the angle at which the "camera" looks down on the map, from fairly low to almost vertical.


 * It's Up to You: Averted.  You are just one member of a huge task force reacting to a magical emergency, and may even occasionally team up with other members.


 * Loading Screen: Before any encounter, you will have to wait through a black screen with a faint grey "Statute of Secrecy Task Force" logo on it.


 * Mana: Spell energy.  One of the more unpleasant surprises for new players is that Spell Energy does not regenerate; it can only be regained by eating at Inns, completing certain special assignments, or as the occasional daily bonus.


 * Microtransactions: In addition to buying them with in-game currencies, you can spend real money to get various supplies for your character, or just buy oodles of gold outright.  At least once a week the in-game store offers a discounted bundle of some sort to tempt you into spending cash.


 * Mythology Gag: Many of the wand movements you have to trace with your fingertip to cast your spells are the same movements used for the interactive "magic" stations in the Harry Potter areas in the Universal theme parks.


 * Neologism: The terms used in and specific to the game -- Foundables, Confoundables, and so on -- are all Neologisms In-Universe.  This is discussed at one point by your contacts, and you learn that some Wizards think they're kinda dumb, and others are more than a little enamored of their own cleverness in coming up with them.


 * Now Where Was I Going Again?: Averted.  At least in the early stages of the game, there are no quest markers, travel destinations or other map goals.  You just walk, and wherever you go, that's where the action is.  Even easier is deploying Dark Detectors at an Inn and simply waiting for the action to come to you.


 * Pillar of Light: May appear over various traces on the map.  Yellow and red pillars indicate increasingly difficult Confoundables to fight; purple indicates traces specific to a special event.


 * Play Every Day: The Ministry of Magic assigns seven tasks every day, which when accomplished yield extra XP, spell energy, and other benefits in addition to the regular rewards from the tasks you have to perform; if you complete all seven you get extra gold.


 * Play the Game, Skip the Story: Cleverly averted.  Story and plot elements manifest organically as you accomplish various tasks, presented as dialogues between you and various personages at the Ministry of Magic.


 * Point of Interest: The game has three varieties:
 * Inns, where players can dine and regain Spell Energy, as well as deploy Dark Detectors to attract high-risk Traces.
 * Greenhouses, where they can find random potions ingredients or grow their own
 * Fortresses, where they can face difficult challenges for high rewards.


 * Repeatable Quest: Even when you have recovered a Foundable, you won't stop re-encountering it.


 * Run, Don't Walk: Averted.  The game wants you to walk and complains if you move too fast (when you do so it renders your wizard icon as flying on a broom, and your travel distance doesn't register for things that tally it).  If you've got the game open in a car, you have to reassure it that you're a passenger and not the driver.  Oh, and if your GPS read is glitchy, your wizard can randomly sprint or teleport anywhere for hundreds of yards in any direction, resulting in more complaints from the game because it can't tell the difference between real movement and GPS issues.


 * Saving the World: Not in a literal sense; the goal is to protect the magical world from being revealed to the Muggles, and in the process track down and identify the cause -- and creator -- of the Calamity.


 * Score Milking: A Good Bad Bug in the coding for the Potter's Calamity Brilliant event in July 2019 allowed you to earn a minimum of 500 points of Wizarding experience for each Brilliant Foundable you recovered; given that the lower levels of Wizarding experience took only thousands of experience points, the first few days of the event made it possible to rack up the levels very quickly.  (The XP was eventually scaled down to around a base 75 points per Foundable.)


 * Set Bonus: Some Foundables are mystically broken into "pieces" that have to all be collected before you have actually recovered the Foundable.  Doing so grants an additional reward.


 * Space-Filling Path: Averted.  The game map is your immediate environment in the real world -- the only obstacles in your way are the ones that exist for real.  There are no arbitrary blockages or Insurmountable Waist-Height Fences to force you to go where the game wants you to.


 * Symbol-Drawing Interface: Spells are cast by drawing the "wand movement" on the screen with your fingertip.  How closely you match the glyph presented to follow, and how fast you do so, controls how effective your spell is.  Fortunately the game pre-selects the correct spell to use for each encounter or combat exchange.


 * World Map: Mostly averted.  The main display of the game shows you in the center of an isometric map based on your real-world location.  Roads and water features are visible, as are selected points of interest.  Using the usual mobile "zoom in-zoom out" gestures will actually change the angle at which the "camera" looks down on the map, from fairly low to almost vertical, but the area shown, while variable, is always local.

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YMMV


 * Game Breaking Bug: The game's inability to cope with GPS misbehavior.  The most mild effect from this is your wizard instantly traveling hundreds of yards in an instant; the game has no "reality check" code that knows that "teleportation" or instant acceleration to hundreds of miles an hour is unlikely at best and adjusts for it.  The most infuriating versions of this problem are cases when you are practically standing on a Point of Interest while the game insists you are too far away to interact with it, allowing access to a Point of Interest and then whisking it away halfway through your interaction with it because your GPS trace has moved unexpectedly, or worst of all, moving your wizard on the world map in the exact opposite direction to the one in which you are walking.  The combined effect can result in a level of frustration with the game almost enough to cause the player to abandon it.