Sunday 25 November 2012

Game Design & Production Assignment #8


Name: The Produce Game
Number of Players: 4+



Objective:

                    To collect 4 food cards of the same season and successfully make a signal with the partner. Once the partner gets the signal without getting notice by other players, your partner has to say signal in order to win the game and gain 1 point for your team.

                    However if the other team notices this signal, they can say Block, which will stop the other team from winning, giving a point to this team. However if this team falsely declares signal, then this team will lose a point



How to Play:
                    A the beginning every one splits into teams of 2 before the game starts, the team must decide 2 signals, 1 for each season. Each person is dealt 4 cards at the beginning. Each round 4 cards are taken from the deck and put on the playing field. Any player may take a card and put it into their hand, however a person is only allowed to hold 4 cards at a time. Therefore for a player to get a card from the field they must swap it with a card they have in their hand. Once everyone is done with the cards, the 4 cards current on the playing field is put into the discarded pile, and may never be used again in the current game. A new set of 4 cards will be drawn from the deck, and a new round will begin.



Chart

Fruit/Veg
Season
Asparagus
None
Beans
Both
Brussels Sprouts
Fall
Apricots
Summer
Blueberry
Summer
Cranberry
Fall
CrabApple
Fall
EggPlant
Both
Grapes
Fall
Leek
Fall
Lettuce
Both
Rhubarb
None
Radicchio
Summer
Onions (Red)
Fall
Peppers
Both
Peas
Summer
Potatoes
Both
Strawberry
Summer
Squash
Fall
Spinach
Both
Tomatoes
Both
Watermelon
Summer


Thursday 22 November 2012

Prototype #3 - Chaiyya Party Party

Name: Chaiyya Party Party
Number of Players: any party size



Objective:
                    To interact with other players and learn their dance moves in order to win.



How to Play:
                    Distribute the cards evenly to all players, every player has to have at least 3 cards. Players have until the end of the party to perform all other players' dance moves from memory. Therefore, players would have to approach, interact with, and dance with other players and learn their dance routine at the same time. Once a player remembers all other players' moves, he/ she can say so and perform the moves, other players will judge if his/ her dance is performed correctly. If the player successfully perform all other players' moves, he/ she wins.



Card:















                    All the cards are very self explanatory.



Concepts & Ideas:
                    This game is inspired by the music video "Chaiyya Chaiyya", which is a music with light beat and lots of dance moves. We want to bring that into our game. Our goal for this party game is big and international, so while we make up cards with dance moves that are inspired from Chaiyya Chaiyya, we remove the feature of clothing and gender to suit the variety of players around the globe. At the same time, we make the art style very entertaining and thought provoking to ensure players will have a fun time playing with the cards.

Sunday 4 November 2012

Game Design & Production Assignment #7





 What is your name? Gender? Race? Religion? Age?
His name is Master Ji.
His gender is male.
His race is Chinese.
His religion is Taoism.
He is 17 years old.

 Where were you born? What about your parents—where are they, and are
they alive? When you were growing up, did you struggle, and if so, in what
way?
He was born in Nanking, China.
His parents were killed during Nanking Massacre.
He was adopted by a Tai-chi master in Wuhan and struggled through his childhood as an orphan and one of the apprentices of the greatest Tai-chi master at that time.

 What year is it now?
1930

 How would someone stereotype you at a glance?
He would be stereotyped as a cool and introvert Asian kid.

  Do you have a romantic partner? If so, whom?
No, he does not at the moment, but there is one girl who lives near his school has a huge crush on him.

 Who is your best friend and what is he/she/it like? How would your friend
describe you?
He likes to work and be alone most of the time.
Other people would describe him as cold-blooded avenger.

 What is your economic situation? What have you done for work?
His economic situation is enough for him to be healthy.
He practices and learns Tai-chi at school and school provides him clothing and foods.

 Would you steal? How do you feel about lying? Can you be trusted by
your friends? Do you have any other vices?
He would not steal.
He hates liar and he would not lie.
Some people find him trustworthy and loyal at times.

 What makes you happy? What makes you sad?
He feels happy when he improves his Tai-chi.
He feels sad when he sees injustice.

 What is the one secret that no one must know about you?
He is asexual but he does not know that.

 Are you afraid to die?
No, he does not afraid to die.

 Do you have any phobias?
No, he has a phobia for spider and cockroach.

 Are you quick tempered or patient?
He is always patient when it comes to something important to him;
he is not quick tempered most of the time.

Sunday 28 October 2012

Game Design & Production Assignment #6

Part 1
Name: Tic-Tac-Toe
Number of Players: 2
Genre: Paper & Pencil game



Objective:
                    To line up 3 Os, or 3 Xs across the 3 x 3 grid in horizontal, vertical, or diagonal row.



How to Play:
                    One player starts off drawing O or X on any location on the grid, then the next player draws the opposite on any location on the grid that has not been fill yet. Players take turn to draw and the game ends until one of the players get his/ her O/X across the grid. In



Modification:
                    My task is to add some more chance-based mechanic into Tic-Tac-Toe, and my idea is very simple. First of all, there will be a 3 x 3 grid same as the original version, then there are 4 squares of O, 4 squares of X, and 1 dependent square. Players first shuffle and put all the square pieces on the 3 x 3 grid with the backside facing up. It starts off with a player chooses a square and guesses the piece is X or O.

- If the player guesses it right, he/ she gets to decide it to be X or O and takes over that space. 
- If the player does not guess it correctly, he/ she loses the square to the opponent and it will be either X or O according to what the opponent has. 
- If it is the dependent square, it is going to be true either the player says it is O or X.






Part 2
Name: Lucky Star (Night Version)
Number of Players: 2- 6
Genre: Board game



Objective:
                    The first player who lands on the star block wins the game. Players can either solo or team up with a partner, 1 or 2, base on the number of players.



How to Play:
                    Players take turns to roll a 6-sided dices to move. If they land on a block with arrow, it moves to the block where the arrow is pointing at. If they land on black blocks, they get to draw a user card; if they land on a "Time to Party" block, they activate an event that effects all players on the map immediately.



Modification:
                    This board game is made of 60% chance and 40% skill, which players have to be lucky to roll the ideal number to advance in game and draw the perfect card at the right moment; however, players also have to use strategy with the player cards in order to make them effective, especially when players play in a pair or more.

                    I decide to make this game to 100% skill oriented where players should be able to plan out their moves and use cards effectively. 

The changes are:
- players make their move base on the number of cards they have in their hand
- each player starts with 4 cards in their hand
- the user cards are increased from 24 to 48 with half of them provide movement boost. There will be: 
                    - "draw 2 extra cards" x 16
                    - "draw 3 cards and discard 2 cards from hand" x 16
                    - "discard x amount of cards and draw half of that amount of cards back (round down)" x 8
                    - "discard all the cards in hand and draw the same amount of cards as one of your opponent you choose" x 8
- Instead of landing on the 100 block to win, players have to go back after they reach 100 block and reach back to 1 in order win.
- all the used or discarded cards will go back to the card pile and shuffle.



Friday 26 October 2012

Prototype #2 - The Starry Night Art Game



Name: Bright Night
Number of Players: 4



Map:




Objective:
                    This is a victory conditional and art board game. There are co-operative mode and competitive mode. In co-operative mode, players have to spend and spread all their "brightness" in the same round; and in competitive mode, players have collect all the stars on the map and whoever has the most brightness wins.




How to Play:

                    Players first decide the game mode, co-operative or competitive. In general, each player starts off with 15 brightness pieces and any player can view and know the amount of pieces each other player has anytime during the game. Then, one of the players places 9 stars on the map randomly. The game begins with 4 players starting from each corner, and they take turns to roll a 6-sided dice to move. Players can go any direction they besides diagonal, and they are not allow to land on/ pass by a block where another player is landed on. It counts as one round when all 4 players have made a move.

Co-operative Mode:
                    In this mode, players have to play the game in silent, with no strategy or any form of communication. Then, they have to co-operate to spread(discard) all their brightness within 2 rounds. There are 3 different types of block on the map, which costs different brightness to land on or pass by. Players can take less steps than the number of steps they have to make, for example, if a player gets 4, he/ she can take as many steps he/ she wants up to 4. However, players have to move at least 1 block each round and cannot move backward(the block they land on/ pass by from the last round). When players land on/ pass by a star, they can gain 7 brightness plus the number of their roll and the star is removed from the map. If a player runs out of brightness, he/ she loses immediately and the rest of the players can only win if they can spread the rest of their brightness pieces within 2 rounds.




Dark Block: a block where light could not reach and appears really dark on the map. Players have to light up this block with 3 brightness pieces in order to move on or land on this block.

Normal Block: a block that receives some light and appears normally on the map. Players have to brighten this block up with 2 brightness pieces in order to move on or land on this block.




Light Block: a block that receives light directly from the star in the sky and glows on the map. Players have to spread 1 brightness piece to keep it bright in order to move on or land on this block.



Competitive Mode:
                    In this mode, players have to compete and collect brightness to shine the brightest in the night sky in order to win. When players take their steps, they have to spend their brightness and put it on the block that they want to land on regardless of the block type. Therefore, players will leave a trail of brightness after they have made their moves. When players land on a block that already has a brightness on, they do not have to put another brightness down. When players land on/ pass by a star, they also gain 7 brightness plus the number of their roll and the star is removed from the map. The game ends when all the stars on the map are collected.



Tile:

Star: A Shinny star that shines brightly in the night sky. Star block is placed by a player randomly on the map before game starts and it provides brightness pieces to players who can reach it.

Brightness: A small twinkle light that provides small clarity in the dark night. It is required for players to make a move on the map and the amount is different depends on which game mode players choose.



Concepts & Ideas:
Interpretation on The Starry Night:

                    The Starry Night is one of the well-known painting painted by Van Gogh in 1889 and it is during the period where Van Gogh was sick.(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Starry_Night) The Starry Night provides lots of emotions to its audiences through Van Gogh's use of colours and composition, which provides lots of possible theme for the team and me to make an art game with.

                    We discover 3 major themes in The Starry Night.

Hope vs Depression: 

                    The exaggerated bright sky makes a contrast with the gloomy town. This happens might because Van Gogh was sick when he painted it, which his sickness might had impact on how he viewed things and how to present it. This could explain why the starlight is extremely bright and surreal. Also, these bright stars might be the metaphor of hope(because of the use of yellow and white, and the symbol star) to getting better from his sickness and it seems trying to overcome the depression he might came across by brighten up the gloomy town.



Peace of Mind:

                    The use of colours also reflects a lot of emotion about this painting. The dominant colour scheme is lots cool colours with blue and yellow. Blue itself provides a lot of emotion such as sadness or depression. However, with the use of yellow, it creates a sense of calm and peaceful feel. It is evident as Van Gogh's "use of the word 'quiet' and reference to Tolstoys book indicates that the night sky made him feel calm and brought to mind eternity." (http://www.artble.com/artists/vincent_van_gogh/paintings/starry_night/more_information/analysis) This also shows what Van Gogh might try to express through the painting when he saw the view. Also, according to John Buck's HTP (freehand drawing house, tree, and a person) test he invented in 1948, the light from the side of the town houses represents Van Gogh was seeking for comfort while he painted it.

Faith:


                    Lastly, the use of composition and metaphor might refer to Van Gogh's mindset during that time. In the painting, there are a gigantic tree on the left, pointing to the sky, and a normal size church that also points to the sky. There is no coincidence in painting, and these might be metaphors that represent something beyond. The tree might represent the force of nature, which could be referring to his sickness, something that he cannot predict or control and it is dominating a big part of his life at that point as the tree is presented so huge and surreal; and the church might represent his belief at that moment or anything that could help him stand against the difficulty he might be dealing with.



From The Starry Night to Bright Star:

                    Since we have discovered and understood a lot about the painting, we are ready to design the game and send the message/ feeling to players through the game.


                    Nothing can get the players involved than having them also be part of the game. In this case, they will play as the stars on sky and spread and share the brightness across the town as the meaning of what Van Gogh tried to express in The Starry Night. Therefore, I design the map of the board a bird view version of the town in the painting, to set players into the scene and participate with what Van Gogh has created. Then, we design 2 different modes for gameplay to approach different messages. 

                    For co-operative, we hope to unite the players to win the game by playing in silent, to achieve the purpose of showing how Van Gogh speechlessly expressed his feeling through stars and painting. As players would lose brightness every turn, this negative feedback loop can bring the feeling of frustration or depression that Van Gogh might had, and players need to plan out their moves carefully in order to win.

                    In competitive mode, we hope to present Van Gogh's battle with his sickness or even downfall by having players to compete with each other and be the brightest star of the night in order to win. Therefore, we make it a survival kind of game and have players to race each other to collect stars. This way we hope players get the feeling of how Van Gogh struggled and searched for hope during the time The Starry Night was painted.


Sunday 14 October 2012

Game Design & Production Assignment #5

Name: Liar's Dice
Number of Players: 2, recommend 3- 6+
Genre: Dice game

Objective:
                    Be the last person with dice.

How to Play:
                    All players roll 6 dices in the cups and each player claims how many numbers from 1 - 6 are face up. For example, it can be four 4s, eight 4s, five 5s, nine 5s, etc. The next player has to claim a higher value than the previous player and so on. Meanwhile, players can call out liar if they find someone is over exaggerating the numbers. At this point, all players have to reveal their dices and see if the statement the last player made is true or not. If it is true, that player is lying, he/ she loses a dice. If it is not true, the numbers do exist, the player who shout out liar loses a dice. This game ends until only one person left with dice.

Modification:
                    In order to make it more interesting and different from the original Liar's Dice, we modify and add some new rules into the game.

                    - If you are 2 dices behind someone who calls you the liar, you can roll an extra dice and it counts into the final result.

                    - Players who have more than 3 dices have control of what is known.

                    - If you have less than 3 dices and there are either double or triple in them, you can roll an extra dice and all the dices will count as a wild dice at your choice.

                    - If the player who calls out a liar and turns out the player is not lying, he/ she has to give up one dice to that player.

Game Design & Production Assignment #4




Name: Elevator Action!
Genre: Card Game
Number of Players: 2-6





Objective: 
                    You are all special agents training to become the next field agent. In this game you are all in a final exam, all in separate buildings, to get from the top floor to the 20th floor. Along the way you will encounter obstacles along the way.




How to Play:
Scoring:
                    A pen and paper is need for this section, write which floor you are currently on after each turn.

Death:
                    If you have no more vest and bullets, and encounter a terrorist, you will die. You spawn back at the top floor, but keep all your cards.




Card:
                    There are 4 sets of cards- Bullets, Vests, Action doors and Elevator cards.The action Door card deck, are to be split into 4 decks, with 2 put on the left and 2 on the right the elevator card deck. Bullets and vests are in a separate pile. Each player starts of with 3 bullets and 1 bullet proof vest.





Vest: is bullet proof vests and are your shield if you choose to use them. These are only used if you have no more bullets and encounter a Terrorist, or anything that directly affect the vests.




Bullet: is ammunition used to fight a terrorist, if you encounter one, you must use a bullet to kill the terrorist, or lose a vest.





Elevator Card: is immediately used, and must be drawn once at the beginning of the turn.





Action Door: must draw at least 1 a turn, this can must be used immediately.





Terrorist: you must shoot the terrorist with your bullet, or you loss a vest. With this if you die from a terrorist, you must spawn all the way back at the top floor.




Back Up Elevator Card: this card may send you or someone of your choice back up 2 floors on the elevator the next turn.





Extra Bullet/Vest: with this card, you can draw 1-2 extra bullets/vests.




Extra Action Doors:  someone else or you is forced to draw 2 action door cards the next turn it is activated--This card may force you or someone of your choice, to open 2 or more action doors the next turn.




Elevator Freeze: this card may force you or someone of your choice to not be able to draw an elevator card.
















Friday 12 October 2012

Flash Game Review: Rivea



                   Rivea is a single player bullet-hell game developed by Andrew Guthrie, known as Exbia. This is a flash game he develops and has been published online lately.

                   The objective of the game is very similar to most other bullet hell game but it has a very interesting addition to it, which players have to dodge the bullet and collect a certain amount of gold at the same time. This makes it very interesting and different compare to many other bullet hell games.




                   The interface is similar to many other flash games or game apps on devices, which is pretty straight forward and clearly lists all the available levels with different level of medals to represents how well players play in that level.





                   There are upgrades to help players progress overtime, and it simply requires the gold players get from levels. I am not going to go through the details of each upgrades as you can always explore them yourselves during the game, but the upgrades are all useful and balanced.




                   Players navigate the ship with the mouse and move around on the screen to dodge. To use some of the upgrades, they can simply press a key on the keyboard to activate them.





                   Gameplay is fun. The patterns of bullets are well organized, with great design, and various use of colours.  Some bullet games feature with specials and fast bullets, but in Rivea, bullets would not travel extremely fast so it allows complex patterns of bullet and players can dodge them precisely. This intensively increases the tension and establishes a different play style in the game.  Also, the background changes according to the difficulty of levels.







                   There are bosses (left image above) in the game. Besides dodging the bullets and collecting the gold, players have to collect the energy (right image above) to shoot laser in order to kill the boss. Otherwise, the boss level will keep going and never end.






screenshot in boss level.




                   This is one of the best bullet-hell flash game I've played lately. The art is solid and consistent. The patterns of bullet are nicely organized and planned out throughout the levels. The mechanic and game play is great, especially with the use of Slow Shield, Gold Shield, and Gold Bomb, which makes it more fun than other bullet-hell game in another way. I also like some levels that require players to use the shields accordingly in order to achieve gold medal rather than just dodging bullets in the entire game. Overall, the aesthetic is great, the gameplay is awesome, and the system is well balance with high replay value. I have achieved gold medal for all levels and received all achievements, and I enjoy playing this game.

Art: 5/5
- It is not extremely fancy, but it is stylish and well polish. The visual effects are nicely done throughout every levels.

Gameplay: 5/5
- Well design and organized patterns of bullets, with helpful upgrades and various achievements.

Music: 5/5
- background music blends well with the game, and creates intensive atmosphere and focus over times.

Game Mechanic: 5/5
- It is nicely done, balanced, and well designed.


Overall: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★