Like video games, artistic game modifications are often interactive and may allow for single-player or multiplayer experience.
It became a successful and influential user-created game modification.
Powerball had a rollover cap but as of the 2012 game modification and conversion to a $2 price point game, no longer has a cap.
The game supports full game modification.
In the same year Sky News mentioned Movie Battles alongside other user-made game modifications.
Other artists have gone further, creating game modifications, or mods, that turn the original games on their heads.
The Stalker community is well-known for its many game modifications that tweak and optimize the games.
Some games allow the players to make their own random map scripts (RMS), a form of game modification.
Users can use in-game or separate tools to construct new levels, game modifications, or other content for games that support the Workshop and then publish them.
A Dutch game-player, Patrick Wildenborg, developed a game modification, a small bit of computer code that changes the game's behavior.