Dear indie-gamers, May has gone-by in a blink and June is around the corner, bringing sun and the long awaited Steam Festival in which well participate (meaning you can try a short demo!). In february, while checking out the previous Steam Festival, we tried another game called Slipways, an awesome indie game by Beetlewing where you expand a space empire by exploring, developing planets to create resources and connecting them with "slipways" to satisfy their needs. The game is easy to understand and yet I managed to spend hours at a time building my empire. They released a few days ago and we highly recommend checking it out!
Tutorial
An exciting challenge coming up for us is the Steam Festival for which we will have a public demo. We have been working hard the past few months to make it as polished as we can. In particular lately we have been working on the tutorial. Creating a proper tutorial is a fascinating and complex task and we have been going back and forth on the best way to approach it. You can go with a very direct approach where you construct an experience and make sure the players go through it. The downside of this can be that the players feel that they are being hand-holded too much, and removes the experience of discovery and freedom.. And on the other hand, you can have a more open approach and just give him tips to introduce him to the important gameplay concepts. In this case the challenge is that the player might be derailed from the best order in which to learn things. In this iteration we have decided to go with the more open approach. For example instead of having an objective: explore a region, with an arrow pointing at where to click and forcing the player to do it, we will have an objective saying find a resource deposit. There will be a soft highlight of the proper button when hovering over the objective to help you out if you want to, but otherwise it will be up to you to actually do it. You can still continue playing however you want if you do not wish to follow the tutorial.
Your leader providing tips and objectives to learn the ropes.
Balanced content
Another challenging design in the same vein is how to propose balanced and varying content every game. How to make each playthrough feel different and yet still be balanced with a proper set of choices for the player to make a plan with? We tried multiple approaches from fully random to fully designed. Recently we settled on a complex system which works with an imaginary deck of cards. If we take the planetas an example, although some aspects of Mars are similar every playthrough, a lot of things will be procedurally generated. For example we want to make sure that the player starts in a location with access to a decent amount and variety of resources, but not the same resources every time. For this we came up with a "deck" system. Basically we add a certain amount of resource locations to this "deck" and a certain amount of empty locations. Then, starting from the initial region the player starts in, the game randomly places locations from this deck outward. After every couple of picks, new resource locations and empty locations are added to the deck to refill it. In this way there is a lot of variety, but the game will remain balanced every time you start a new session.
A partly explored map around the starting area.
Sound effects
This month we have also started to do a new pass on sound design with Frederik who is doing awesome work. Hearing all the soft clips and clicks when interacting with the user interface feels very satisfying. And the different ambiance sounds linked to city size or planet zoom level really bring the game alive. Our goal is that the sound design gives you proper feedback on your actions and makes them feel more there while still remaining quiet enough that you dont think about them. We also want the game sounds to have a material feel as it takes place on a planet and not in space. We have also started working with the composers from Sinephony to create new tracks for the game with the same ideas in mind. The work they did so far is really great and we hope you will like it! [previewyoutube=JtRJ7SOEfbE;full][/previewyoutube] A recording showcasing the recent sound fx pass. Were cheating on the gameplay here. Until next month after the Steam Festival! Terraf Team
[ 2021-06-08 18:15:46 CET ] [ Original post ]
- Terraformers Linux [7.5 G]
• Explore the Red Planet
Send your leaders to mysterious locations and be the first to discover rich resource depots, giant crystal caves and stunning natural wonders.• Develop your cities
Found new cities on craters and in lava Tubes. Make them thrive and meet your population's rising demands.• Manage your resources
Mine the rare metals of Mars, manufacture them into advanced goods and set up an effective transport system between your ever-growing cities.• Terraform with ambitious projects
Restart a volcano, construct giant space mirrors or crash ice asteroids to geo-engineer the entire planet.• Become a gardener of life
From spreading adaptive bacteria, to planting full-grown forests with bears. Each life form has specific requirements and provides strategic benefits.• Join the Terraforming!
By making this game, we hope to inspire humankind to take its first steps out of the cradle and become an interplanetary species, starting with Mars! Do you want to join the terraforming movement, get updates about the game development, chat with us, and be the first to be considered for the closed alpha? Then join our Discord server!- OS: Ubuntu 12.04+
- Processor: 1.3 GHz CPU
- Graphics: Graphics card: DX9 (shader model 2.0) capabilities
- OS: Ubuntu 12.04+ Desktop only
- Processor: Dual-core 2Ghz CPU
- Graphics: Graphics card: DX9 (shader model 2.0) capabilities
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