Friday, October 25, 2013

Victor Chelaru : A simpler game making process

                Have you ever played a game of Telephone? You know that game where one person comes up with a phrase. Then that person say the phrase to another person and then that person says what they heard to the next person; and so on, until the last person say the phrase out loud. The phrase the last person says if usually very different to what the first person came out with. A bunch of information is lost in each transition from one person to another.  Victor Chelaru argues that this is very similar to the game making process.

                When making a game, information travels down from execs to the audience.  And the same way information gets lost in a game of Telephone, information will get lost on its way down. Many people are required to make a game, allowing for information to get lost more often.
               

                But what if we try to eliminate the middle man? Get rid of the programmers so the artists and designers would not need a programmer to be able to make a game. To do this we would need to empower the artists and designers with tool that get rid of the programmer. That is what Victor Chelaru is trying to do with FlatRedBall tool.

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Aaron Walker Presentation: Working Hard

                Aaron Walker has been in the gaming industry for thirteen years. He has worked on games for the N64, PS2, GC, Xbox, Wii, X360, and PS3. Most of his career has been spent working on sport and kids friendly games. And I think the most important thing to take away from his experience is to work hard.
                This may seem like something obvious but, I think working hard is extremely important if I want to make a career out of making games.  Walker mainly got into the industry and stayed in the industry because he was willing to work hard. He knew nothing about making games when he first started but had the passion to learn. He tried to always do what he was told to show the people above him that he was willing to work hard. And in the end it is worth it.  Also it is important to learn what one’s personal niche is, so they could provide something ones in the team cannot or do not want to. For Walker, his niche became working on UI.

                Another reason it is important to work hard is because of crunch. Crunch can be soul crushing and crunch is something most games go through in development. Crunch will require workers to work around sixty hour weeks. During these times, it is important to figure out what makes crunch worth it.

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Rich Reagan: Insight Into Social Games

                I would like to start off by thanking Rich Reagan for taking time to present his presentation to my class.
                Social games are not a fad and have changed the way people experience games. As a “hardcore” gamer who want to get into the video game industry, it is important for me to get used to that fact. This is important because it is important to be able to make games for everyone, not just me.
                Change in the gaming space is not a new phenomenon. Similar changes also happened to the music industry. Music went from the radio to records to cassettes/CDs to digital. Throughout those changes music still came out and was successful, but the way people wanted to experience music has changed. Content was and will always be king. The same goes for video games; video games are now mainly available portably through digital means. For example, the Ios store has more games available then all the games that have been released on console.
                A road-map to creating an engaging and successful game is: customer engagement, simple choice, potential & existing users, add value, and learn & evaluate.  In simple choice, do not make the game too hard. The player has not yet paid any money to they are not deeply invested yet. But constantly reward the play to keep them engaged. Every once in so often give the player a hard stop. The player could only continue through in-app purchases, waiting, or friend gate. The friend gate will allow the player to invite potential and existing players to also come play the game. Through playing the game the player must learn how the game structure works. This way the player could properly evaluate their purchase.
                At the end of the day what I am really after is a great business upon a great game!