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devCAT improves end-to-end game production with Asana

Resultados

Reduction in missed work

Significantly reduced tasks being forgotten or missed because all work is visible to everyone

Improved collaboration

Improved collaboration across teams thanks to work in one place

Quarterly planning

Smoother quarterly planning using one source of truth

logo-devCat
RegiónAsia, Australia y Nueva Zelanda
Tamaño de la empresaPequeña empresa
SectorTecnología
Flujos de trabajo clave
Desarrollo de productos
Funciones clave
automation iconReglasproject-view iconVistas del proyecto

When you play Mabinogi, a very popular massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG), anything is possible. Set in the mystical Erinn, a land where a century-old battle rages, players can choose to craft themselves as heroes, villains, or even party animals. The choices are infinite and that’s part of the magic. A South Korean game, Mabinogi is available on desktop in different countries around the world. Game developer devCAT, a subsidiary of gaming giant Nexon Korea, developed Mabinogi in 2004. So, when the need for a mobile version of the story loved by millions arose, it made sense that devCAT be tasked with the important mission.

Converting a desktop game to a mobile version is no easy feat, especially when fan expectations are high. No one knows this better than Kyungha Kim, Head Project Manager at devCAT. Kyungha, who leads five other project managers, oversees game development by connecting teams, organising work processes, and maintaining quality assurance. Overall, Kyungha and her team help organise the work of around 200 employees who are split into 30 teams. Project Managers are trusted to keep game development on track, so when managing work became difficult the team sought a solution.

Preventing forgotten tasks

When a piece of work is unaccounted for or forgotten, Kyungha and her team call it “black boxing”. Work managed in different ways and in different tools resulted in occassionalblack boxing at devCAT. Using spreadsheets made it hard for project managers to track multiple tasks at once because documents were updated by asking each individual about their progress. This meant project managers could not assess and report on the status of more than one task at a time.

While devCAT had two work management tools available at the time, one was too complex (and so had low adoption rates) and the other was only specialised for organising documentation. Along with forgotten tasks, top-level visibility into work was difficult to glean because everything was scattered across different tools. This made planning quarterly milestones and managing team workloads challenging and time consuming.

Kyungha and her team needed a solution that was simple, yet powerful enough to manage their development processes. Ideally it would:

  • Show work progress at a glance to improve planning

  • Allow tasks to be clearly assigned to prevent black boxing

  • Provide insight into workloads for better work distribution

  • Improve visibility for better collaboration across teams

After trialing several work management platforms, Asana became the top choice. Features like Rules and Timeline would improve project management and the intuitive interface ensured staff would actually use the platform.

Kyungha and her team of project managers introduced Asana as a ready-to-use platform. They created rules to automate steps for things like project distribution, task assignation, and deadline scheduling. Each team was trained on how to manage their work and projects in Asana through step-by-step slide decks that could be viewed again at any time. This clear implementation plan, plus Asana’s ease-of-use, led to rapid adoption by the entire devCAT team.

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Asana was easier to use than other platforms we’d tried so it was adopted faster by our organisation.”
Kyungha Kim, Head Project Manager

Managing end-to-end production with Asana

Asana is now used to manage the entire game production process–from designing graphics to building game features. Every team from development to design uses an Asana project to manage their work. When tasks are relevant to larger projects, like quarterly goals, they are also added into those projects so everyone is working off of the same information. This gives the project management team a clear view of all work happening across the company and insight into how bigger projects are tracking with the Timeline view. Rules are set up so completed tasks are automatically moved into a “Completed” section which makes spotting unfinished tasks much easier.

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We use Asana to manage our entire game production process–from designing graphics to assessing user experience. It gives us a clear view of all work happening across the company, something we never had before.”
Kyungha Kim, Head Project Manager

The result of this new transparency into work happening across teams is that “black boxing” has been significantly reduced. The entire company now collaborates better because they are using one tool and time is saved because people are no longer so focused on coordinating work. devCAT wasn’t alone in this; the 2021 Anatomy of Work Idex found 60% of employee time is spent on work coordination. With Asana, devCAT has reduced this statistic internally so they’re working more efficiently.

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All our tasks are now categorised in Asana. As a result, the number of forgotten, incomplete tasks has decreased significantly.”
Kyungha Kim, Head Project Manager

Looking to the future

The team at devCAT will continue working hard to bring Mabinogi Mobile to life. Soon enough, people will be able to enjoy the magic of Mabinogi right from their mobile device. Asana will continue to help the team manage the process, and their future projects, every step of the way.

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