Saturday, April 19, 2014

The stuff that didn't make the cut

So we've mentioned before that we had to cut some content in order to meet our deadlines, I wanted to talk about what was cut and why we decided to cut it.

1. Characters - We were originally aiming for 9 playable characters. The intern and 8 recruitables. We cut this to a total of six characters.

It came down to two things major time consumers. The first is the actual character art. Designing and drawing the characters was a big time sink for Julia. Additionally after the initial design we'd go back and refine.  The second was the technical art and particle effects for the skills. This was actually a huge time sink, and Kiril was the only one on the team who could do it well. At the end of the day we needed Kiril on other things and we proffered refining our other characters and making more set pieces.

2. Procedural Content Generation - Oh boy. This one was a doozy. So we actually decided to cut PCG not based on the difficulty in programming, but rather the difficulty in game design. We were really worried that it would be way too time consuming to tweak our level generator to make levels fun and good. That combined with the short amount of playtime game demo day participants would have led us to hand design our levels instead.

3. Equipment - We wanted equipment for our characters. It would allow players to customize their characters a bit and rare equipment finds would make playthroughs more exciting. Unfortunately this came down to just not having enough dev time. We actually had a system where characters could have equipment that modified their stats implemented. However there were a lot of other things we needed to do. We needed equipment to drop, we needed equipment to be switchable at certain points, and we would ideally also need equipment to be sellable. All of this added up to too much additional work that we simply couldn't justify. The dev time was better spent elsewhere.

4. Currency - We really wanted currency to be a huge resource that the player had to manage. Currency would allow the player to buy experience for characters, equipment, and heal characters. Unfortunately like equipment we just didn't hae the time to implement all the things to make currency feel good. We could have implemented some of the basic stuff, but by the end of Lifelike we were pretty set on having everything in our game look and feel good. If we had implemented currency it would have been pretty sloppy.

So yeah, those are the main things we cut (although there are more). I'm really glad we had a small tema and we could decide quickly what was the highest priority

Friday, April 18, 2014

The Results

Yesterday was Game Demo Day, aka our final presentation for Lifelike.

It went really well. It was pretty amazing seeing some people really enjoy our game. It really made all of this hard work worth it!

One thing that really made us proud was people actually learning and understanding our game well. We had a couple of people play who have never played a strategy RPG like Lifelike. These players were confused at  first, but picked it up pretty quickly. This was immensely rewarding to us as it was one of our biggest concerns coming into GDD.

We ended the day with two first place awards and two second place awards, notably we won best overall game. We felt pretty proud of this.

We've worked a ton over the past three months and it seriously feels so good to be done. We're still figuring out what we're going to be doing with Lifelike, but ultimately we had a great semester.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Livelike: The Live Action Trailer for Lifelike

The real-world consequences of Arcane Badge
So, in thinking about how to create a trailer for our game, I realized that game footage wouldn't be too exiting on its own.

Then I thought about how I also happen to be taking a video class and have access to expensive camera equipment...

Now there's a live action trailer for Lifelike. Called "Livelike".

It's not done yet, but I hope you enjoy the teaser image!

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Polish, Polish, Tutorial

We're fully into polish mode for our demo for Game Demo Day at this point. We keep telling ourselves we're content locked, but new things keep sneaking their way in.

It has come to our attention that most people won't immediately know how to play our game upon seeing it (weird, right?), so I've been thinking about what we can do to create a condensed tutorial for our condensed demo.

So, I wrote up a design for a tutorial, but ended up getting way too into it and accidentally made it out of scope (woops). There's little chance that this will be ready for game demo day, but designing it with the demo in mind actually led me to figuring out ways to streamline the tutorial for the eventual full game.

The tutorial essentially only introduces players to the basic controls and game flow, leaving the rest to the players to learn for themselves. It also does a good job of introducing the player to the tone and narrative in the way without getting bogged down in exposition.

Anyway, check out the design doc for the tutorial after the break.

Friday, April 4, 2014

POLISH POLISH POLISH

We're gearing up for Game Demo Day and you know what that means!? POLISH.

We're trying to make our game look and feel better while eliminating any bugs we find along the way.

We've done some sweeping changes to make the UI a lot better and to make combat text more readable.