Even in circumstances where agents have perfectly consistent goals pure coordination games with stable equilibria, the difficulties of organisation costs outlined previously exist. Yet, serious information difficulties are not ingrained in the structure of interactions in such contexts, since actors have incentives to fully divulge facts and their own preferences to one another. The goal of these games is to establish some kind of agreement; however, it may not matter which of multiple options is picked. Conventions are necessary, and innovation may be needed, but substantial structural obstacles to knowledge gathering and interchange are absent.