It's official! Last March of the Dodos was greenlit and will move forward into full production as one of three thesis games our cohort will develop! The hard work and unity of the team paid off with the professionals and faculty alike, and we are pumped to see what we can do over the next 10 months with twice as many developers as we had for the prototype.
We're in the middle of brainstorming and constructing an updated product backlog right now, so there's not a lot of new content to display. Fortunately, that makes this the perfect opportunity to introduce our new team members!
The Team
- Team/Developer Name: Naturally Selected Studios
- New Members
- Brandon Rees
- Job: Artist
- Status: Sweet beard (1 of 2)
- Skills: Maya master and broad game dev knowledge
- David Gilder
- Job: Artist
- Status: Sweet beard (1 of 2)
- Skills: Mad drawing abilities
- Derek Higgs
- Job: Engineer
- Status: Pumped up (the jam, that is)
- Skills: Amazing work ethic and dedication to finishing tasks
- Felix Lau
- Job: Engineer
- Status: Industry-employed
- Skills: Problem solver extraordinaire
- Eric Levin
- Job: Engineer
- Status: Med school eligible (but he chooses to be here!)
- Skills: Self-teaching and incredible capacity for retaining new information
- Jesse Ferraro
- Job: Producer
- Status: Fresh-faced and fancy free
- Skills: Mass media design and team leadership
Sadly, Jorge Elola was assigned to a different team, so he'll be employing his talents elsewhere. We wish him the best but miss him here at Naturally Selected Studios!
- Troy
"Developer Diary: Keeping Tabs on Game Production" is a record of various student games developed in the U of U's Entertainment Arts & Engineering: Master Games Studio. This blog, produced by Troy Johnson, focuses on the teams' progress and accomplishments over the course of their games' production cycles. Enjoy!
25 February 2012
19 February 2012
A Successful Team Effort -- Week Ending 18 Feb
The prototype is complete, and it has been demoed and presented to our faculty, peers, and the professional panel...
And we couldn't be happier with how it turned out!
We received and incredibly positive overall response to our concept and to our presentation. The theme was well-received, as was our implementation of it. While there were certainly some design concerns and some critiques of a few mechanics, most of the comments from the professionals were suggestions for future iterations and compliments on what we had built thus far. If they are making suggestions for consideration n future work, we'll take that as a good sign that we might actually have a shot at putting future work into this game.
Kamron, Jorge, and Chris have done a phenomenal job making this game come to life. Their weeks of work have turned into a great product, and it's been an honor to work with them.
As for the future, we're all stoked to see which games become our theses, and we're excited to team up with more of our peers to really create something special. If one of those thesis projects turns out to be the full production of Last March of the Dodos, well, that would be pretty sweet... Okay, it would be awesome. :)
Here's to the future!
- Troy
And we couldn't be happier with how it turned out!
We received and incredibly positive overall response to our concept and to our presentation. The theme was well-received, as was our implementation of it. While there were certainly some design concerns and some critiques of a few mechanics, most of the comments from the professionals were suggestions for future iterations and compliments on what we had built thus far. If they are making suggestions for consideration n future work, we'll take that as a good sign that we might actually have a shot at putting future work into this game.
Kamron, Jorge, and Chris have done a phenomenal job making this game come to life. Their weeks of work have turned into a great product, and it's been an honor to work with them.
As for the future, we're all stoked to see which games become our theses, and we're excited to team up with more of our peers to really create something special. If one of those thesis projects turns out to be the full production of Last March of the Dodos, well, that would be pretty sweet... Okay, it would be awesome. :)
Here's to the future!
- Troy
13 February 2012
Imminent Extinction -- Week Ending 11 Feb
Last March of the Dodos is playable! There's a white-boxed level in place, the Dodos are making their way to their destination, and the player has full control to set traps and watch the Dodos disappear as they die. Only minimal chain reactions are possible, but seeing them in action is pretty cool: place the pie bait, watch the Dodos cluster in large numbers, then--BOOM!--drop an explosion in the middle of them. :) And it's all guilt-free!
Beyond that, we also have a solid vision of how we want our environments to look. Above is a waterfall in Mauritius, the home of the now extinct dodo bird. It's a shame that such a beautiful place has such a dark past.
We present to the faculty and the graduating cohort on Monday, so we're looking forward to how we can clean up our presentation for the professional panel on Wednesday. We can't believe time has flown by so quickly, but we're happy with our progress, and we'd love to continue work on such a fun concept for our official thesis.
Wish us luck!
- Troy
Beyond that, we also have a solid vision of how we want our environments to look. Above is a waterfall in Mauritius, the home of the now extinct dodo bird. It's a shame that such a beautiful place has such a dark past.
We present to the faculty and the graduating cohort on Monday, so we're looking forward to how we can clean up our presentation for the professional panel on Wednesday. We can't believe time has flown by so quickly, but we're happy with our progress, and we'd love to continue work on such a fun concept for our official thesis.
Wish us luck!
- Troy
05 February 2012
It's All About Style -- Week Ending 4 Feb
We had a couple meetings with our professors and with each other this week, and we came to the conclusion that our game needs to ooze style. Not that we didn't assume or want that before this point, but it was sort of a distant consideration, second to getting the game functioning properly on an engineering level. We realized, however, that even the mechanics need to feel stylized--the physics reactions, the trap effects, the whole package need to be a part of the aesthetic as much as the art style. While that doesn't change much of the work we've done up to this point, it does put a little different spin on the way we think about the project as a whole. Rather than the art and the engineering being two entirely separate pieces, we are starting to recognize just how much collaboration every aspect of the game needs across all the disciplines involved.
That said, it's a good thing that each of the team members has some understanding of what each of the others is doing and is capable. Kamron and Jorge have worked together to figure out how to get traps to place at the player's will on any spot on the level, Jorge and Chris are working together on the 3D modeling of the Dodo, I've been helping Jorge and Kamron lay out algorithms for how the traps function, we've all worked together to determine the final designs of traps and how the Dodos look, etc. We've proven to be a good team so far, and I expect the next (also last) week-and-a-half of development to turn out a great prototype.
The game has playable pieces at the moment, too, though not that fall together into a cohesive game yet. By next week, it will actually play like a game, so take a look at some more concept art in the meantime. Aren't they cute?!
- Troy
That said, it's a good thing that each of the team members has some understanding of what each of the others is doing and is capable. Kamron and Jorge have worked together to figure out how to get traps to place at the player's will on any spot on the level, Jorge and Chris are working together on the 3D modeling of the Dodo, I've been helping Jorge and Kamron lay out algorithms for how the traps function, we've all worked together to determine the final designs of traps and how the Dodos look, etc. We've proven to be a good team so far, and I expect the next (also last) week-and-a-half of development to turn out a great prototype.
The game has playable pieces at the moment, too, though not that fall together into a cohesive game yet. By next week, it will actually play like a game, so take a look at some more concept art in the meantime. Aren't they cute?!
- Troy
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)