This weeks devlog entry is by Em!
Hi, I’m Em and I work with Gord at A Shell in the Pit Audio making sounds for Parkitect.
This week I had an exciting opportunity to visit Vancouver’s one and only Amusement Park; Playland, on a field recording trip. Christopher Tammik joined in the adventure and we each attended armed with a recorder and microphone. We went thinking that we were going to have to be quite stealthy, but ended up only sneaking our gear under clothes and scarves on the more intense rides. We rode the mini train a ridiculous amount of times with no questions asked! (With the exception of some curious kids, which you’ll hear in the following recording.)
The aim for this game in particular was to capture as many mechanical, engine, and rattling sounds as possible while avoiding people and music. Not the easiest thing to do even on an overcast monday, but we did manage to grab some great stuff. The interesting thing to note about what you hear in the game is that these recordings are not going to be used only for their corresponding rides, and they’re not going straight in as recorded. The squeaky clacking of the mini-train could be a single layer amidst multiple for any ride in the game.
Mini Train Recording
So we pull discrete loops and segments out of these recordings. For example, this mini coaster:
Mini Coaster Recording
What you build in your theme park won’t correspond to this 30 second long mini coaster ride. We’ll simply extract similar bumpy and rattly segments of the recording, edit them together, and make it loop seamlessly so it can work for any coaster you build. In Parkitect we create 5 different speed loops per coaster, including the climb loop, which this ride had a great sound for. We were also able to get close enough to the lift mechanism on Playland’s wooden coaster (one of the oldest in the world!) and record a super long segment. That one will most likely be hidden in a couple different rides. In the Wooden Coaster, it was very challenging to keep the microphone steady; it was hard enough holding on and being thrown about the seat.
Wooden Coaster Winch Recording
Other than coasters we were after engines. The louder the engine, the more it would drown out all the background noise of the crowd and music, which all gets recorded and added in separately. It was usually loudest inside the ride, so we spent a lot of time running around riding everything we could. (Yes, this is a real job.) Though it did get to the point where even the kids rides like tea cups were making us feel sick. Note to anyone planning something like this: Do not ride the most spinny thing first.
Here is one of my favourite engine sounds, the scrambler. I cleaned some of the crowd shouts out a little bit but the engine was powerful enough that I didn’t need to alter it too much.
Scrambler Recording
That’s all for now, next up is a trip to a sightseeing train crawling through a vast park. Hope you enjoyed reading about our fun trip. See if you can find these sounds somewhere in the game later! It won’t be easy.
Here’s a merry little video to close off.
Merry Go Sound
Parkitect
Texel Raptor
Texel Raptor
2018-11-29
Simulation Singleplayer
Game News Posts 215
🎹🖱️Keyboard + Mouse
Very Positive
(6061 reviews)
http://themeparkitect.com/
https://store.steampowered.com/app/453090 
The Game includes VR Support
Parkitect Linux [355.71 M]Parkitect DLC1 Linux [14.22 M]Parkitect DLC2 Linux [31.13 M]
Parkitect - Taste of Adventure
Parkitect - Booms & Blooms
Build the theme park of your dreams, and keep it running! Meticulously design that newest roller coaster, place the rides where you want them to be, and construct scenic structures and objects to make the park beautiful. Let your creativity shine, and when you're finished share it with the world!
Features
- Tools to build the theme park of your dreams
- A robust, piece-based roller coaster designer to let you build the greatest roller coaster you can think of
- Detailed guest behaviors. Watch them take the train to that new section of the park, or read their map to find a ride
- Build efficient transport infrastructures to keep your park stocked
- Maintain the illusion by hiding utility structures and the inner workings of the park from guests
- Extensive support for mods and custom content
- OS: Ubuntu 18.04+. SteamOS+
- Processor: 2.3 GHz Intel i3 or comparableMemory: 4 GB RAM
- Memory: 4 GB RAM
- Graphics: Shader Model 3.0 capabilities (anything with a graphics driver that isn't older than ~2016 probably works)
- Storage: 2 GB available spaceAdditional Notes: This will run the game. but for the best experience something closer to the Recommended Requirements is better
- OS: Ubuntu 18.04+. SteamOS+
- Processor: 3.0 GHz Intel i5 or comparableMemory: 6 GB RAM
- Memory: 6 GB RAM
- Graphics: Dedicated graphics card made after ~2015
- Storage: 2 GB available space
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