Archive for July, 2008

Go back to Shibuya with Sega, Chunsoft, and 428

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

It looks like the Wii is going to be the console destination for sound novels. In addition to Imabikisou Kaimeihen, an expanded PlayStation 3 game, Chunsoft is developing 428 The World Doesn’t Change Even So. Like Imabikisou this sound novel has actors running around Shibuya. No, not underground Shibuya like in the World Ends With You. The World Doesn’t Change Even So is set in real Shibuya with fictional abductions, explosions, scandals, wiretaps, and bio terrorism.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuYEnU5nULM

 

 

Shibuya sealed off. In 2008, Shibuya will shake.

 

Images courtesy of Sega.

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Firing Back at Worthless Interviews

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

These days there is a lot of junky gaming news. One cause of this is the obsession with giving every member of a development house a chance to sit down and shout out. You don’t have to be an artist, programmer or designer - if you deal with the corporate side, you are just as eligible, and if you make one successful game, you will be held in higher regard than other hard working members of the industry, regardless of your future sales or if your ideas have any merit.

Some fans are getting tired of this situation and are mouthing back. For example, one of the worst recent offenders is BioWare CEO Ray Muzyka. While he has been a name and a presence in the industry for a while now, lately he has been spouting off some of his least insightful “wisdom” yet. For example, he calls the Wii a toy not because it is a gimmick, but because its lack of processing power means that Ray and pals cannot make more gripping stories. And since, according to Ray, games are “defined by narrative,” then playing the Wii isn’t much like gaming.

Commenters on blogs like Kotaku responded unfavorably, citing the obvious fact that this theory would throw out entire generations worth of games with limited or no storylines, and that the concept of games in general has little to do with fixed narratives (though the actions caused by a game can tell stories). The reason for his statement is obvious however; Muzyka’s company makes story heavy games, and if he, the CEO, can convince you that story is the most important part of a game, then he can expect more sales from you.

The next silly idea comes from a new interview where Muzyka feels that the sex scene in Mass Effect helps prove that games are art. He claims that everyone talking about the scene shows it impacted them emotionally. Reading a few of these Kotaku comments shows that some gamers get it - people were mostly talking about the controversy that the mainstream media tried to create around it, not about the “emotions” of the scene. In fact, as some state, the sex scene feels cheap, and isn’t any different than what you would see in the average film. Despite the hoopla, it is nothing special. Games may be art, but this is not proof of it.

In the end, I don’t expect a CEO to have the most insightful comments on the games Bioware makes. But when interviews like these are the increasingly the norm in this age of click-through’s and ad revenue, I am glad to see that some folks are calling bullshit, rather than taking these as serious topics of discussion and further wasting our time.


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Capcom sheds light on Resident Evil 5 release date

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Resident Evil 5 and Chris Redfield are probably coming this March ‘09.

Remember the thrill you felt when you first heard about Resident Evil 5? At that time, GameCube owners were the only people enjoying Resident Evil 4, though the promise of a PlayStation 2 version was imminent. RE4 was critically acclaimed and with good reason; it was a reimagining of the franchise that had relied too long on annoying camera angles.

The announcement of RE5 intrigued gamers everywhere. RE4 was already a visual masterpiece of the then-current generation. What would the end-result be if Capcom were to place the same harrowing action in high-definition?

This question would be answered in March 2009.

According to GameSpot, Capcom has shed some light on RE5’s release in a business strategies presentation. During Capcom’s projections for its fiscal 2008 (which is up to March 31, 2009), the publisher said:

“(It) aims to sustain solid growth by introducing Resident Evil 5 and titles in other core franchises.”

Capcom’s sales projection for RE5 is at 2.3 million copies worldwide. The publisher also expects to sell 1.5 million units for Bionic Commando and 610,000 for Lost Planet: Colonies.

Image of Resident Evil 5 is courtesy of Capcom.

Tags: capcom, re4, re5, release_date, resident_evil, resident_evil_4, resident_evil_5

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Mondo Agency

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

UPDATE: cactus has decided to update the game due to the feedback he’s gotten. The jumping level is now easier and skippable for those who have trouble beating it. There’s been a few other changes as well, including vital bug fixes.

This is cactus entry for the winter competition at YoYoGames.com.

“Welcome to Mondo Agency! An eerie cyber FPS with horror and puzzle elements. As an agent it is your mission to kill laser indians and save the president!

Turn off your lights and turn up your speakers for maximum enjoyment!”

Name: Mondo Agency
Developer: cactus
Category: FPS/Adventure/Weird
Type: Freeware
Size: 7.5MB
Download: link 1
Walkthrough: link

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New Oddworld game in the works, may be ‘years’ off

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Filed under: Adventure, Business

It’s been more than three years since we last frolicked about in Oddworld: Stranger’s Wrath, but according to Maxis co-founder Jeff Braun a new game set in Lorne Lanning’s Oddworld universe is currently in the works. According to Wilfrid Laurier University student newspaper The Cord Weekly, Braun confirmed his involvement with developers Oddworld Inhabitants on the project during a presentation at the school earlier this week.

Few details were revealed about the upcoming game, though Braun noted that the title will feature a “revolutionary new 3-D animation system” and “cinematic quality on a ‘1 to 1 scale’ to that of computer-generated motion pictures,” adding that the same assets could be used to create both a video game and film version in parallel.

This isn’t the first time talk of CG features and Oddworld have been mentioned in the same breath, with Lorne Lanning himself refocusing his company in 2005 to create both games and accompanying CG movies, the first of which was announced a year later as Citizen Siege. However, as that title has yet to see the light of day, it doesn’t exactly surprise us that Braun admits that the next Oddworld release could be “years” away from seeing retail shelves, and may even be released in an episodic format when it’s all said and done.

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MDickie Interview

Thursday, July 31st, 2008
EDIT: Exclusive preview image courtesy of MDickie.

MDickie is the author of dozens of unique games, and probably needs no introduction for most of this audience so I’ll get right to the interview.

1. One thing that’s notable about you is how fast you complete games, often in three months; did you ever have problems with procrastination, or is working so fast natural to you? Do you use any productivity tools such as to-do lists or schedules, or do you just work on things as you feel like it?

MD: Well, let’s not fly that flag too hard because time is gushing away from me like water at the moment! I estimated it would only take 3 months to turn Reach into a wrestling game, but the project is heading into its 6th month and I’m still working 12-hour days. Of course, 6 months is still pretty astonishing for a game of that size and sophistication. My closest counterpart, “Pro Wrestling X“, has clocked up a good 3 YEARS in production - and that’s a team effort! As you say, 3 months is the standard for me now though - so my fans get restless at anything longer. After all these years, I guess I just know what I’m doing. I instinctively know exactly WHAT needs to be done, WHEN it needs to be done, and HOW I might best achieve that. It’s a lot like a puzzle - I just know how to put all the pieces together as quickly as possible. One of my best tricks is dividing the day into art work and programming work. I create media in the morning and then bring it to life in the afternoon, so there’s a nice flow to what I’m doing. Other than that, it’s a race against the clock that makes me work so fast. I don’t really have a choice! It may be a cliché, but time is money. The longer I spend making a game, the more money it has to make. For instance, if I had spent all year making World War Alpha I’d be out of business now because it didn’t fly. Game over. I’m only here because Hard Time arrived and picked up the slack. My scattergun approach makes me failure-proof. If one concept doesn’t work, another one is right around the corner to take the next shot. And on and on it goes, evolving towards perfection. The weak concepts die out and the strong concepts live to fight another day…

2. You’ve said on your site that you believe that making a game as a team is a bad idea because it dilutes the creativity. But couldn’t each team member be creative in their own part of the game? For example, the musician with respect to a game’s music, or the artist with respect to a game’s graphics. It’s not necessarily true that having a team means that every decision in a game has to be decided by committee, each person could have full dictatorial control over their particular part.

MD: Well, let’s qualify that by pointing out that it doesn’t work for ME. Other people are free to do what works for them, and they’ll no doubt have more success in certain areas. All I know is that everything people love about my work is down to me doing it single-handedly. There’s not a soul who can tell me what I can or can’t do, or what is or isn’t possible - not even at the level of publishing. That’s how I tackle concepts and add features that would never get past committee. I simply find it more fulfilling too. When you rely on somebody else to bring your vision to life then things get lost in translation. With this new wrestling game, for instance, I can’t countenance how many hours I would have wasted explaining why an animation needs to follow certain rules or why a texture needs to have a certain structure. All of these things I understand instinctively, so not one second is wasted in error and not one pixel is lost to compromise. That’s true of any profession. People usually rely on others because they HAVE to - not because they want to. It used to drive Woody Allen crazy that making a film was a team effort. He lamented that “every day a truck pulls up full of fresh compromises”! Likewise, Michelangelo was criticized for working alone - but he insisted, “How else can I hear God’s voice?”. Only in solitude is a man true to himself and his vision. Anything less is a counterfeit version of creativity, born out of necessity rather than will. At the end of the day, you have to ask yourself whether you’re Michael Jackson or “that guy from The Jackson Five”…

3. The first time I played Hard Time, I walked a few steps, caught some type of sickness, walked a bit more trying to figure out how to cure myself or find a doctor, walked a bit more, started falling down and coughing and looking like I’m about to die, a police officer came up to me, I tried to talk to him but accidentally hit the kick button, and that was when he then killed me. This strikes me as getting the spirit of exactly what prison is really like (at least according to my aunt who spent a few years in it, she tells some pretty crazy stories, like how they had to work for long hours or get no bathroom paper).

So the question is: how much research did you do on prisons before making that game? Did you rely mainly on how it’s portrayed in media (like that HBO “Oz” series), did you watch documentaries on it, did you ever visit one, and in general, how important do you feel it is to research subjects relevant to your games?

MD: The way you opened that question, I thought you were going to criticize it for NOT being realistic! I’m not sure what kind of prison your Aunt ended up at, but the one is Hard Time was supposed to be fictitious in its barbarity. You obviously don’t live in the UK! We live under a liberal regime, so our criminals are treated like royalty. Their only concern is which game they’ll load onto their en suite PS2 or which TV show they’ll watch on cable, so it wasn’t exactly a fruitful source of inspiration. I did suddenly start taking an interest in how prison was portrayed on TV (Oz was already fresh in my mind and Prison Break had just gotten big), but I’d be
lying if I said there was anything structured to it. At the end of the day, a game was always going to be fictitious and exaggerated - so any realistic details would have only fallen by the wayside anyway. Making a game is a lot like writing someone’s life story - you play down the things that aren’t interesting and dwell on the things that are. The closest thing I did to research on this project was to follow a discussion that I had stumbled across on GameDev.net. By coincidence, they happened to be talking about how a prison game could possibly work from a design point of view. All the problems I eventually had to tackle myself - such as how do you keep it realistic without it being as dull as a real regimented lifestyle? Some might say I didn’t actually succeed in sidestepping that landmine, but I did my best! It was a very difficult concept to hold together - as most of mine are - but I pride myself on being able to turn anything into a game. Not necessarily a good one, but a coherent game nonetheless…

4. Because this is a blog for other independent developers and I’m one myself, I should ask this question. Like Introversion, the self-proclaimed “last of the bedroom programmers”, you’re a bit separated from the rest of the independent games community: you don’t post on forums for example, and say things like “If you look around, I’m the only person in the history of this business that’s doing what I’m doing.” (Said in a March 2004 interview.) You’ve called them (us) embarrassing, insecure, out-of-touch, bitter, jealous, and so on, and you’ve called yourself the most reviled man among independent game developers.

I’m not saying that the current state of indie development doesn’t have flaws, but do you still feel that *not one* other independent game developer even comes close to your level (either in talent or outlook) enough that you could call them a kindred spirit? For instance, take the finalists at the IGF (http://www.igf.com) for this year, or the winners from previous years, do you truly have nothing good to say about any of those games or the people who make them?

MD: It’s funny you should bring this up, because I just posted a commentary on my website about this very subject (”The IceMan Thaws“, 16th December 2007) - acknowledging the quality of some of this year’s entries and endorsing the efforts of my fellow independent developers in general. Even going so far as to say I’m not worthy of being a part of it. I’ve never really had a problem with individual creations (I’ve been playing an independent pool game for the past 5 years!). My argument has always been that I simply don’t see anybody else doing what I’m doing - whether that’s for better or worse. At the end of the day, there’s a difference between what I do and what the average independent game developer does. I single-handedly make big, sophisticated 3D games that kids get excited about - the average independent developer makes quaint 2D games that appeal to a niche audience. I churn out a rich variety of concepts at the steady rate of a mainstream corporation - the average independent developer forces out one title every year or two. I publish my own boxed products and run a profitable business - the average independent developer is resigned to it being a hobby. Now, when you’re asked to articulate those differences as often as I am, the rhetoric is bound to get a little ugly from time to time. Especially when I constantly have to defend myself against a loud minority who resent all of the above and see me as a threat. I know how hard I work and I know how special what I do is, and anybody who has the audacity to dispute that is going to be chastened. At the end of the day, there’s a limit to how much I can apologize for stating the truth. I’ve never said anything that I can’t back up 100%. When Wrestling MPire 2008 drops next year, you bring me one human being who could even begin to make anything of that size and sophistication. He doesn’t exist - not at the independent level or even the mainstream level. I don’t take any pleasure in saying that. My fondest wish is to create an army of people who ARE capable of that. At the moment, that’s simply not the case. And until it is, I’ll be bridging the gap between independent creativity and mainstream success - proving that the impossible is possible and the unthinkable is thinkable…

5. You once said something that I’ve always thought was a very inspirational quote: “People assume I’m quite courageous for starting my own business, but there’s actually a lot of cowardice involved. I’m just as scared of NOT achieving something as other people are about going out and doing it.” I wish we had more cowards in that sense.

One of my favorite movies is Ikiru, which is about this old Japanese guy who worked in a bureaucracy for all of his life and then was diagnosed with stomach cancer; suddenly realizing that he’d done nothing with his life he spends his last few months doing one last worthwhile thing. I think for a lot of people it takes some drastic event like that to make them realize the importance of their life, and how short it is. So this may be a difficult question, but what do you think is the best way to get people to be afraid of wasting their life (short of being given a few months to live)?

MD: If you want to get deep about it, I had a cousin who grew up alongside me at practically the same age - only to pass away before he was barely a teenager. You’d have to be pretty cold not to be haunted by that! One of us is living the life of his dreams, the other isn’t living at all. That’ll get you on a “gotta compensate for the chance they missed” kinda vibe. Subconsciously, it’s probably why I spend every waking hour achieving something or other. It’s practically a sin not to. As for the particulars of getting into this profession, it’s not my place to preach because I got into it when I had nothing better to do. I had no stable source of income to sacrifice and no mouths relying on that income, so I would be remiss to advise a family guy to follow my example. It’s like what Jesus said about rich people, except it’s “easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle” than it is for a man with responsibilities to pursue his dreams! The more baggage you’ve got, the harder it is to travel. That’s why the Buddha spoke of “detachment”. The more nerve endings you put out into the world, the more painful it is to live the extraordinary life that many of us yearn for…

There are two ways to be happy - to have everything you want or to want nothing! I’d lean towards the latter if I was to counsel a man of responsibility to pursue his dreams. The trick is to enjoy the process rather than the end result. For instance, it’s impossible for me NOT to be a game designer. It’s not something I “do” for a purpose, it’s something I “am” instinctively. Banish me to a cave and I’ll conjure up some form of entertainment involving rocks - just as my younger self had made games out of cardboard. If you’re doing something for the right reasons then you can’t fail at it anymore than you can “fail” to play tennis - you can only fail to WIN! And so it’s by divorcing oneself from the result that one guarantees he’ll enjoy the process. Pay attention the next time someone gives up learning to play the guitar or some such, and you’ll realize that’s what’s going on. They weren’t enjoying the “process” of making music - their mind was focused only on the end result. Recreating the tunes of their favourite musician, playing to an appreciative audience, getting a deal, etc. The sponsoring thought was counterfeit, and their efforts could only follow suit. As Bart Simpson conceded, “I wasn’t good at it right away so I gave up”…

6. You’ve mentioned that even though your games are violent, they treat violence much more seriously than other games do, they you don’t romanticize it, but instead they show its harmful aftereffects; you’ve said that your war game was really a game about peace. I agree with that viewpoint myself, for instance in one of my games there was a point in the story where many players told me they felt guilty about killing so many enemies (which was exactly the intention). But this type of thing is rare. For instance, last month I played through Jets’n'Guns, which is a wonderful indie shmup but as anyone who has played it knows it absolutely romanticizes violence almost every aspect of the game. Why do you think that type of thing is much more common in games?

MD: I attribute it to something I’ve often criticized the industry for, which is our bizarre fascination with Hollywood. Despite all the success, we’ve somehow reached the point in our evolution where we’re “ashamed” of being game designers! We want to make movies instead. The problem is movies already exist, and they don’t need us. And so we have this awkward dance where a game designer steps outside of his comfort zone and makes a fool of himself. It’s like a mechanic and a chef switching roles for the day - your car won’t work and your kitchen will be a mess! I cringed when I heard they were making games of The Godfather, The Sopranos, and Reservoir Dogs - because I knew they’d miss the point and screw it up. Handling that material isn’t where a game developer’s strengths lie, so it’s like giving a loaded gun to a child - quite literally! If you’ve ever been in the company of a child once they’ve accidentally been exposed to those images, you’ll notice that they’re preoccupied with what doesn’t matter. “Wasn’t it cool when Tony Soprano shot that guy? The gun went bang! And there was blood! And the blood was red!” From what I can gather, game developers seem to respond in the same way. Out goes everything that does matter and in comes a fascination with what doesn’t. The same is true of (relatively) original material such as Grand Theft Auto and Manhunt. It’s very much from the childish school of thought that states “anything naughty is cool”. They’re the kind of people that listen to rappers and say, “He just swore! Did you hear him swear?!” - blissfully unaware of all the sentiments that were articulated in and around the swearing. I can only attribute that to the industry’s infancy, and the fact that we’re not used to having this much creative power. If you give a starving man a meal, he doesn’t eat it with much decorum. Take a socially inept man and give him power, he’ll make just as much of a mess. That said, my games are as violent as any out there - so who am I to talk?! I’d like to think I’m a bit more articulate about the whole thing though. If I was embroiled in controversy, I’d be explaining myself via every media outlet in the country. These guys tend to run away like kids that have let off a stink bomb. When there’s no method to your madness, you cease to be an artist…

7. You mention that when you’re not working on games, you’re working on self-improvement: exercise, studying philosophy and politics, and so on. Do you have any strong views on those subjects? You don’t often speak about those types of things on your website, so it’d be interesting to know who your favorite philosophers or political thinkers are, and what type of exercises you use and recommend (I favor complex isometrics like this for example), and any other self-improvement tips or practices you’ve picked up.

MD: I get accused of going “off topic” when I talk about creativity, so there’s no way I could pull off a rant about politics! I do know a lot about it and have some considered views, but I’m not arrogant enough to believe that my opinion is more valid than anybody else’s. That pretty much sums up my political views to be honest - the belief that there are no right answers. People often like to criticize politicians, but I seem to spend a lot of time defending them. The whole “George Bush is stupid!” and “Tony Blair is a liar!” angle seems very childish to me. People tend to have such passionate views to compensate for the fact that they don’t know what they’re talking about. The reality of politics is that you spend 18 hours a day going blind on paperwork, trying to make as few mistakes as possible. The whole “I hate him for this!” and “She’s stupid for doing that!” line of thought doesn’t quite do the balancing act justice…

As for philosophy, for me that tends to be a by-word for religion. “Religion” is a very loaded word nowadays, so you have to wheel it out carefully. It conjures up images of a brainwashed zealot who believes in following rules. The reality is that religion is simply passionate philosophy. If you think about, these guys are just philosophers who were so incredibly popular that people built up institutions around them. They’re victims of their own success. That’s why militant atheism bothers me a great deal, because - as with politics - it doesn’t get to the heart of the matter. 90% of atheists are simply annoyed by religious people and religious practices, and know no better way of articulating that annoyance than by disregarding the whole thing. They quite literally throw the baby out with the bathwater! They would do better to acknowledge that Krishna, Moses, Buddha, Jesus, Muhammad - and thousands of others like them - were great human beings first and religious icons second. And so would religious fanatics. It all boils down to the human ego. The atheist’s ego says, “I’m intelligent and you’re gullible!” - whereas the fanatic’s ego says, “I’m close to God and you’re not!”. If they were detached from ego, they would each see that they’re arguing about the same thing. The scientist has a profound respect for life, and the spiritualist has a profound respect for God. The thing is the words “life” and “God” are interchangeable - two ways of viewing the same energy that permeates every atom in the universe. In that sense, science and spirituality are growing closer and closer together - until we realize that they were never apart…

And so my interest is in developing an all-encompassing world view - which understands every religion in the history of mankind and cross-pollinates that with science, politics, and the arts. The role of exercise is to create the perfect vehicle within which that world view might travel and be expressed. People think I’m going off topic with that too, but I can’t stress enough how important it is. Where do you think I get the energy to work 12 hours a day without going crazy?! It’s true what they say about “strong in body, strong in mind”. I shudder to think where I’d be if I didn’t sit a fit and healthy body in front of this laptop. People assume that fitness is an egotistical pursuit, born out of some deep-rooted insecurity. “Who are you trying to impress?” was the snide remark of one woman I recently argued the matter with. “Nobody” is the answer - it’s all about YOU and how you feel when you wake up in the morning. There’s no better metaphor for human achievement than a bar of metal that weighs more than you, which you’ll eventually lift over your head! The mental strength that’s required to confront your notions about what is or isn’t possible. The confidence that comes with setting goals and achieving them. It’s all life in its many permutations - mind, body, and soul…

8. You’ve written once in an interview that you have a retirement letter already written, and may give up independent game making because it’s not as rewarding and you aren’t able to make a good living at it. Have things improved since then, or are things still on the down-turn for you? I hope it doesn’t happen personally, it’d be great to see you continue to make your ’seasons’ of games for many decades to come.

MD: The irony is it’s the fact that I’ve got everything going for me that makes me feel that way! I’m as well-publicized as it’s possible for an underground artist to be, I work with genres that have mainstream appeal, I have a huge catalogue of products, and I pocket every penny of the proceeds. And yet here I am barely making a living, so I have to ask myself is this as good as it gets? Is this what I’m telling kids to aspire to? When you first get into the entertainment industry, you hear tales of 50 Cent selling one million albums in a week and figure it must be child’s play. With hundreds of millions of people owning computers and playing games, how hard can it be to reach just 0.01% of them? The reality is for all those millions playing, not ONE will part with their money unless you give them a reason to. And I mean that quite literally! I was once being shown around the premises of a publishing house and the guy was pointing to each game poster saying, “That one has sold, that one hasn’t, that one has…”. He wasn’t talking about whether or not they had sold “many” copies - he meant whether or not they’ve sold AT ALL! That’s what independent artists are up against. Whether it’s films, music, or games, the little guy is struggling to find ANY one to put ANY value on what they do. But that’s just the mortal in me talking. The human ego thinks it needs recognition, and the human body thinks it needs food and shelter. The immortal, on the other hand, seeks only to experience things. He’s the one that can’t sleep at night because he’s so excited about what he’s going to achieve the next day. The one that enjoys spending every waking hour doing something creative. The only “paper” that one cares about is the fan letter from a kid who considers you to have made their favourite game, or the guy who’s been inspired to hold his head a little higher and chase his dreams a little harder. When you hear me switching from positive to negative, it’s the latest battle in that endless war between yin and yang. How long it remains balanced in favour of my games is anybody’s guess!

9. My favorite game of yours is Wrecked — not for its execution, but for its ideas, just for what it meant. I’m an atheist myself, but even so I still found a lot to like about a game with such religious/spiritual purpose. I felt that there was a lot of potential in it, but that it was marred with a few problems which kept it from reaching it fully. Do you plan on making a sequel to it, or a game similar in style and tone to it?

MD: Yeah, Wrecked suffered from a lot of novice flaws. But if you think about it, it’s the first time I had ever tackled a game of that nature. Everything prior to that was industry sims like Popscene, niche concepts like Sure Shot, and of course fighting in its numerous guises. Hard Time is practically the only other step in the evolution of that adventure gameplay, so there’s plenty of scope for improvement. The spiritual themes in that game were very much an afterthought. Throughout its production, it just became obvious that the way a player chooses to guide a life says a lot about them. Do you give in to base instincts to get what you want, or do you make life harder for yourself by showing restraint? What I love about the end result is that it’s entirely ambiguous. God or spirituality never manifests itself at any point, so you don’t know whether the guru was mad or telling the truth! It’s just something you’re told, and then you decide what it means to you - much like in real life. I like the idea of a player being the “soul” to a game character’s “body”. That’s a theme that I’ll being expanding upon in some future games. Most notably one about a game character who doesn’t know he’s a game character! The nature of existence will obviously be key to that game, as the “created” struggles to come to terms with “creation” - and indeed the “creator”. More controversially, I’d also like to make a series of RPG’s about religious figures. I don’t see why a game need be any more offensive than a movie about those times and places - of which there are many. In fact, you could argue that a degree of interaction would make it even more meaningful. It’s just such a thorny issue that I have to hold off until I know what I’m doing and why I’m doing it…

10. You’ve written things like “Programming is a scientific factor that crushes the spirit, and scares away talented visionaries. The pivotal moment in the life of any art form is when the ’scientist’ starts losing ground to the ‘artist’.” This is why I feel that game engines which allow anyone to make games without much programming or technical knowledge are the future of game development, but a lot of people feel that ‘real’ game designers write their own engines from scratch and only use C++ or the like, and they look down upon games made in Blitz Basic, Game Maker, or engines like that. Do you think this will change as engines and computers get increasingly powerful, and that we’ll see a time when most games don’t have a ‘programmer’, or do you think the emphasis on the graphical arms race will ensure that most games will continue to be made using pure programming indefinitely?

MD: Oh, you’ll never see the back of programming. That’s what game development IS! It’s inconceivable that there’ll ever be a time when making games doesn’t involve telling a computer what to do, when to do it, and how to do it - and that will always be a technical factor. I’m not calling for that to be eradicated - I just celebrate when it’s made more palatable. Like the wires hidden behind the plastic face of your favourite gadget, we’re just looking for the unnecessarily complex to be simplified. I mean, playing the piano isn’t “easy” - but it’s just easy enough that anybody can sit in front of one and work at getting their head around it. I think products like Blitz BASIC and Dark BASIC are already achieving that for game development, and that’s all we need to coax our version of Lennon & McCartney onto the stage. I resent the implication that it’s not “real” programming though. People talk about them being “game engines” as if they’re readymade games, but all I get out of them is a more logical way of loading in and manipulating 3D models. There are still 250′000 lines of code that make my latest project a wrestling game! Like writing music, the talent is in coming up with those lines and inserting them in the right place. We never want to make something so easy that there’s no struggle involved. I’m reminded of a story my school headmaster used to tell us about two caterpillars at the bottom of his garden. One emerged from its shell and blossomed into a colourful butterfly, whereas the other made no such progress. In order to make life easier for it, he gently cut its casing and a butterfly eventually emerged - only it was black & white because, without the struggle, no blood had gotten to the wings. Long may game development be hard enough to get the blood pumping!

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News: MMOGs on the rise

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

The trend continues, and MMOGs are getting even more popular. Here are a couple recent articles that you might find of interest:

From WIRED, this article discusses three new MMOGs being released in 2008 that have potential to be huge.

From the NY Times, this article discusses the popularity of MMOGs among kids.
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Hori Nintendo DS Lite Charging Stand, Charge Your DS Lite Sideways

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Hori Nintendo DS Lite Charging Stand, Charge Your DS Lite Sideways

The Hori Nintendo DS Lite charging stand or dock allows you to charge your DS Lite on its side instead of the usual flat-charging method. Charging a DS Lite this way may make it more elegant and refined. Available in black and white, $16.90 for one.

Where To Buy:

Play-Asia {Charge Stand DS Lite (Black)}

Image: Hori | Via: SlipperyBrick


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Gamestop taking preorders for Gears of War re-release, launches June 24

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Filed under: Microsoft Xbox 360, Action


We’re pretty sure that everyone and their dog played the original Gears of War the first time around (aside from most Border Collies, who are, in fact, devout PS3 fanboys), but if you’ve yet to divide a competitor using a firearm/lumberjack tool, a Gamestop pre-order listing for a $40 Gears re-release might tickle your fancy. We’ve yet to hear from Microsoft about details for the title (or a confirmation of the game’s existence, for that matter), but as the listing reads “Gears of War with Maps”, we can only assume it will contain the Hidden Fronts DLC as well as the Raven Down and Old Bones levels, rather than the hit song by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs. With less than a month until the game’s supposed release date of June 24, we’re sure to hear more soon.

[Via X3F]

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I can’t keep my hands out of the code

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Things have been pretty busy lately as I complete the process of moving my family to Boston. That doesn't prevent me from jumping into the code and breaking things every now and again… If you didn't know, 360voice has no real dev environment. We like to live out there on the edge… everything is coded directly in production against production systems… it keeps us spry… on edge… if you haven't tried running a software product with NOT development or staging I suggest you try it… it makes you question the need for complexity.

Although I have been known to roll back some of Squidpunch's code from time to time… I know we have a mantra around here that when something breaks, blame Steve (Fatty Chubs)… but lately it should be changed to blame Trapper (ChangeAgent). :)

I did jump in and add a few things lately that I never called out.

  1. Added gamerscore to the Top 20 Most Played list on the game pages.
    This is fascinating because I sort of assumed that people who played 313 DAYS of Oblivion would have all 1250 points… not so! Craziness! So click around a few of the popular games. You might be surprised at what you see. A special thanks to Himself0890 for the suggestion!
  2. Rearranged the challenge trash talk to match the blogs.
    This was something I have been meaning to do. When I redid the comment layout for the blogs I never did the trash talk, so now it should be much easier to read. I have seen in the forums that you might have to refresh your style sheets (CTRL-F5) otherwise it might look funky.

So that is it for now. Look for a few bigger new features this week! And for all those wondering, we will be recording another podcast here soon as well.


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