I guess one of the issues of getting older is that last January seems like it happened a week ago. At least that's my excuse for not updating so often.
Since August I've implemented FBX files for skins to make animation a bit less buggy. Also did a lot of art retooling on the Cells level. And we're making mobile games as well.
I really didn't want to go back to mobile after making Pocket PC games, but too many people (three) asked for games to be made, and we finally said yes. So to help raise money for Shades we developed a puzzle game where you stuff objects into a moving van. It's a game for kids so our client can give their client's kids something to do.
Marmalade is what we're using to help development, which is loads more fun than Eclipse, where my first attempt to port Android games was done in. I ... I really hate Eclipse.
Well, back to some art and some shades.
Shades Of Sanity
Saturday, January 16, 2016
Monday, August 3, 2015
Post ReplayFX
Whew... Finished up four days of ReplayFX and had only a minor disaster on the last day. Got to meet a few hundred great people who tried out the game (and one somewhat inebriate.) Gave out half the cards we had printed and may have picked up another contract. All in all a win.
This was my neighbor, he was really nice and draws comics. You can check his stuff out at jonchad.com Behind him was a guy that restores pinballs and arcades.
And this was the creepy automated puppet show across from us. This would play traditional children's themes from time to time. This was on sale for 600$. Don't have the space. Also don't want to be murdered in my sleep by tiny puppets. Whenever they played "It's a small world" all I could hear was :
"It's a world of dread, it's world of fear,
The good people do not end up here.
It's a fact, you'd been had. You are here, cause you're bad!
You're the dead one after all. "
Well, you get the point.
This was Mike's booth. He's with a Cleveland dev team and they're working on a head-to-head both where you're blasting balls over to the other side of the arena. They kind of had him at the ass end of nowhere. I knew where he was and had trouble getting to them. I had to traverse around the inflatable obstacle course. He did end up winning best indie game in show, though!
In addition to all the marketing we learned about three other possible events to attend. Magfest maybe? ArcadeExpo in LA? (maybe that one.) There's also Kurokiro Festival.
Well, need to catch up on several hours of sleep deprivation.
Whew... Finished up four days of ReplayFX and had only a minor disaster on the last day. Got to meet a few hundred great people who tried out the game (and one somewhat inebriate.) Gave out half the cards we had printed and may have picked up another contract. All in all a win.
This was my neighbor, he was really nice and draws comics. You can check his stuff out at jonchad.com Behind him was a guy that restores pinballs and arcades.
And this was the creepy automated puppet show across from us. This would play traditional children's themes from time to time. This was on sale for 600$. Don't have the space. Also don't want to be murdered in my sleep by tiny puppets. Whenever they played "It's a small world" all I could hear was :
"It's a world of dread, it's world of fear,
The good people do not end up here.
It's a fact, you'd been had. You are here, cause you're bad!
You're the dead one after all. "
Well, you get the point.
This was Mike's booth. He's with a Cleveland dev team and they're working on a head-to-head both where you're blasting balls over to the other side of the arena. They kind of had him at the ass end of nowhere. I knew where he was and had trouble getting to them. I had to traverse around the inflatable obstacle course. He did end up winning best indie game in show, though!
In addition to all the marketing we learned about three other possible events to attend. Magfest maybe? ArcadeExpo in LA? (maybe that one.) There's also Kurokiro Festival.
Well, need to catch up on several hours of sleep deprivation.
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Moving Day...
So we've moved down to a smaller house and finally got the homestead up and running. Just amazed on how many companies don't have their shit together. We had a hard to navigate road in our old place that didn't allow large, 18 wheelers up without getting stuck. You'd think alerting the moving company to this would make them come up with a plan. You'd be wrong.
So after getting stuck they look for one of their smaller trucks. In the days were everyone has a cell phone and GPS I still don't know how a dispatcher can't locate one of their vehicles. The driver works for you, right? He isn't just some guy off the street?
I understand that if your situation doesn't fit the mold than there might be some issues. Though when places like a closing company have one job, and that job is to deliver a check, how is it that they can screw it up? Rather than mailing the check to pay off our mortgage, the person just handed it to a random UPS guy. That's one step away from putting thousands of dollars in a wheel barrow, rolling it downhill to the bank, them hiding under some covers and hope for the best.
And that's not the only check they've lost.
ReplayFX is around the corner and I'm very happy to see how well it's been advertised. The local food store I walk to even had a poster until some jerk ripped it down. It was a nice motivator while it lasted.
We're going to have two lap tops to show off the game, one with the rift and one without. It's good to have two, there's always something that comes up. I plan on having the game on a thumb drive and the number of a rent a center in case something happens to a machine. I'm not sure where we'll be located at, but if a kid goes flying out of the bouncy castle and knocks our table over, I want to be prepared to be back up and running.
ReplayFX is going to be four days, and that's a rather long time. It never been held before so there's no telling how big it's going to be. It could be an echoing empty hall, or we may have huge lines. Who knows, maybe they'll out do the furry convention, something that Pittsburgh is now known for.
The shot above is the sky we've added. Keith thought the level needed it, and after looking at it I agree. Previously it was just darkness, which I think worked a lot for some areas of the first Silent Hill. But I think it worked out rather well.
Friday, May 15, 2015
It's too easy to drop the habbit
Miss a couple weeks of blogging and next thing you know you haven't posted for months. The older I get the more time seems to compress into just one continuous moment.
Phantom Menace released 16 years ago. I had to look it up on imdb to make sure I wasn't crazy. I swear I just watched it in the theater a few years ago.
So since we got the riff I've added three small areas in front of the game. I think there needed to be some time where the player can just walk around before any puzzles needed solving to continue. Before you woke up in a cell and had to figure a way out. I think it wasn't a bad way to start, but if we're pushing VR with ReplayFX then I think people want to see more than just a cell to start with. Some people fly through puzzles, some people struggle, and I didn't want each person have to spend a half an hour at the booth to see stuff.
Things seem to be going smoothly. Going to try to cast Joe (the player) for a few lines and get some actual voice acting in.
And I'm also selling and buying a house, for ultimate crazy busy.
Phantom Menace released 16 years ago. I had to look it up on imdb to make sure I wasn't crazy. I swear I just watched it in the theater a few years ago.
So since we got the riff I've added three small areas in front of the game. I think there needed to be some time where the player can just walk around before any puzzles needed solving to continue. Before you woke up in a cell and had to figure a way out. I think it wasn't a bad way to start, but if we're pushing VR with ReplayFX then I think people want to see more than just a cell to start with. Some people fly through puzzles, some people struggle, and I didn't want each person have to spend a half an hour at the booth to see stuff.
Things seem to be going smoothly. Going to try to cast Joe (the player) for a few lines and get some actual voice acting in.
And I'm also selling and buying a house, for ultimate crazy busy.
Friday, October 31, 2014
Oculus Rift
Oculus Rift First Thoughts
So the development kit came in yesterday and I was able to look at some samples and test out the equipment. It's a prototype so I'm not expecting everything to work without some issues.
After spending some time reinstalling drivers, rebooting, trying every different video port I finally found the trick on my system to get it working.
So the thing requires two usb ports and a video ports, has two wires coming out of the camera as well as two wires from the head piece, so there is a bit of cabling here. The head set is fairly light, even though it looks like a brick.
The house demo that comes with the game has some low resolution textures, and these really stand out in VR. I got the feeling that I was looking props made out of paper and cardboard, kind of like visiting a local haunted house.Surfaces that don't have normal maps really stand out. So the suspension of disbelief is less forgiving.
The head tracker can allow you to turn all the way around and look behind you, which I wasn't expecting. It seem to work really well as allowing me to look around seamlessly.
The device puts you entirely in the world, since it cuts you off from reality. You can't see your own hands, so you have no sense of self. You guide the controls by feel, and it's an odd feeling to look at your hand and not see it. When lights flicker out in a game, you really end up in the dark.
The inverse is also true. Sitting in a bright sunny game can make you forgot that it's night time.
It's curiously dangerous on how immersive it can be. Then again I'm an old dog raised on Atari where my adventure guy was a block.
I also was getting a bit of vertigo when looking down off of tall ledges. I'm not sure if everyone would experience that, but you really do get a sense of distance and scale, and I'm a bit afraid of heights.
Unfortunately I can't really show a video or picture that can get any of this across, so I recommend trying one out if you get the opportunity.
Speaking of vertigo
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Jar Specimens
Jar Specimens
Here's a pic of the exam room area of the demo. Keith worked on the glass shader a bit for this one.
Also been working on improving the AI of the wandering bad guy to this level. Also working up on an alternate way of dealing with him, other than just straight up hiding.
Going to be showing off what we got working at the Pittsburgh IGDA Halloween part here:https://sites.google.com/site/pittsburghigda/
It's their annual costume party. I'll be going as Benny from the Lego Movie.
Friday, September 26, 2014
No Human Being Would Stack Records Like This
Shot of the records room from the demo we're working on. The scary part is that medical records are often kept in huge stacks, not unlike this one. We don't have a paperless system yet, and medical paperwork is something that seems to breed in the dark corners until it reaches the ceiling.
Currently working on a door puzzle, which involves severed limbs and growing vines, plus some more medical trickery. Should have some images of that one soon.
Scary picture for the week is this nice abandoned subway station. Not sure if it's supposed to be the end of the line, but the track seems to lead straight to a concrete wall.
Can't find the source on this one, it's being offered as a wallpaper on many sites.
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