Berzee

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Posts posted by Berzee


  1. Good luck with your new podcast I will not listen to it because it is not about computer games! :D So I appreciate your separating it out into a new thing, as it won't mess with my completionist desire to make sure I've listened to every episode of the Idle Thumbs flagship internet talk show (though that completionism is already somewhat marred by the fact that I was only able to find hyperlinks of questionable legitimiacy for MOST of the progresscasts).

     

    P.S. If your new podcast is a ploddingly chronological and meticulously researched podcast about the entire history of a nation or empire, I take back that first thing I said. ^_^


  2. Just saw your second stream, SuperBiasedMan. I'm happy that chat told you about turning on the shadows in Beware of Falling Samurai -- I will definitely go back and see about changing the default quality settings, and/or making it so that shadows are turned on even on the lowest settings. Thanks! :)

     

    Phill, that was a fine rendering of my opening comic, quality voicework. :tup: I'm glad you appreciated the ragdolls. =P


  3. Played it, liked it! I think I like Dot Gobblers best when they're used as a countless horde. I was actually glad that it was a "beat all the enemies before time runs out" game instead of a "survive infinite waves" game, only because of my personal disinterest in wave survival stuff. (At first I thought it was just an avoid-the-baddies game because clicking didn't seem to do anything, so it was a nice surprise when I clicked randomly and a gobbler fell over).

     

    Just curious what the reasoning behind the long respawn time is? I know it's not very long but after foolishly running into the first laser a few times in a row it started to seem interminable. But maybe it's there for technical reasons and/or to give the sound files time to play. Anyhow, I got up to 290 points and that seemed like a big number so I called it a victory.

     

    It looks like you didn't have time to put minigames in (or maybe I just didn't find them) but just running through the halls clicking madly and dodging lasers was fun, so it seems like a solid foundation on which to layer some more variety / amusing surprises. :)


  4. That was fun. I get twenty slyboots points! Interesting how after a couple of screens of confusion, I got pretty good (though I say it myself) at pulling my vision back to take in all four screens at once and subconsciously identify FAKE SLYBOOTS without knowing it. The additional level complications were introduced at a nice pace, just when I found myself becoming a recklessly confident burglar.

     

    I stopped playing after 20 because I thought it was generating random levels but the OP makes it sound like there's a finite number. How many rooms are there? Did I foolishly quit playing just before the exciting finale?


  5. 5 hours ago, Squawk Squardon said:

    On Itch.io it's marked as Pc Mac and Linux downloadable, but I only see a .exe in the download. Am I missing a thing?

    Nope, just me being a numpty. =P I've added mac and linux builds now. (No idea if they work though! I don't currently have a good way to test them. Except for you, Squardon! u r only hope).

     

    10 hours ago, Ben X said:

    This is great! Lovely intro comic, funny prop choices (that hat and those ropey looking parasols are brilliant choices) and most importantly a clever mechanic - using the shadows in a 3D world to judge where things are going to fall. I could definitely play a lot more of this if you expanded it out and added a bit of visual and audio polish.

    Gee thanks. :D

    I think if I ever did come back to this, the first order of business would be to figure out some way to rig it so you could get an idea of how close the falling objects are to the ground. Maybe see if there's a way to make the shadows get darker as they get closer...

    It also occurs to me that if the game was longer, a simple way to make the later levels a bit tricky would just be to have the sun start setting. =) It would be a lot more challenging if it wasn't high noon!


  6. Aha, just saw your edit, Teljoor, and it clued me in to the problem. Turns out I had a line of physics-related code outside of the special place where Unity requires all physics code to run ("FixedUpdate", if anyone is wondering). I uploaded a new version that should let you play on Fastest now if you want to...although it turns out that there are no shadows at all on Fastest, so the quality settings are kind of like difficulty settings too! :P

     

    Thanks for playing as well, kevin888. ^_^ I think we can agree that the moment when I found that boing sound in the Youtube Audio Library is the moment when this project became Art.


  7. I fixed the itch page so it knows the game is for windows, mac, and linux now. =)

     

    Bummer about the movement bug. =( May I ask what version of Windows you're on (I have run it on a couple different win10 machines thus far)? I will have to try on a few more computers to see if I can get it to break. In any case thank you for testing! I will let you know if I upload any potential fixes. At least your guy will be safe from falling samurai where he's stuck. :wacko:


  8. Whew! Didn't have time to keep a very good dev log =T but I finally finished the game. I'll update the top post with the link but here it is again: https://itch.io/jam/wizard-jam-4/rate/101763

     

    Try it out and let me know if it, y'know, runs. =P

     

     

    Life lessons I learned during this jam:

    -- Unity Ragdolls are bogus. They're not as magical as I thought, and even when using the built-in unity man, they still stretch and deform and result in torn polygons flashing 'cross the sky. But they're ragdolls so they're still fun by default.

    -- ProBuilder is great! I tried the free version and I felt a tiny bit like a Level Designer for a few minutes.

    -- I've done third person camera stuff before but this is the first time I've tried doing it in a full level with like, walls and corners and stuff. It has made me realize that you better have a real good reason for choosing third person instead of first person when you're making a game, given the extra headaches it causes (the good reason in this case is, of course, ragdolls!).

    -- Probably I learned other things too, things so profound I haven't even realized them yet.

     

    Now it's time to rest and recuperate, and then play all the other games. Hooray!


  9. UPDATE

    Download link here: https://itch.io/jam/wizard-jam-4/rate/101763

    Let me know if you play it and if it runs without catastrophic failure. :)

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     

    Hooray!

     

    I started making a game about falling samurai several days ago. I don't have terribly much time to devote to it, so I picked something that I thought I could use to just mess around with a few aspects of Unity that I've never had occasion to use before, such as ragdolls and Pro Builder. It's coming along! The hardest part has been making a gif or a video to put in this thread (because none of the free recording software I try is working with my computer for some reason) so I decided to make the thread without anything like that, just to register my participation.

     

    Anyway, here's a not-moving picture of some falling samurai. Another thing I don't have time to do this week is learn how to rig characters in a way that plays nicely with built-in Unity ragdolls, so these samurai look suspiciously like the default Unity 5 Man wearing a helmet I found on the internet.

     

    http://i.imgur.com/qHn3vU2.jpg


  10. I enjoyed Jake's story about the college newspaper becoming slightly less slovenly (at first glance, at least) thanks to the wholesome influence of local business. Good job, printing shop. :tup:

     

    I always thought "TF3" would be a better name than Overwatch. It wouldn't stand for anything of course. It's just a nice three-character name.


  11. My favorite 80 Days route so far, I think, is what happened when I decided that I would head due south from England no matter what happened. That one was pretty exciting. (And I like how choosing the dumb and obviously inefficient routes in that game will usually lead you to some kind of crazy shortcut).

     

    I will probably need to try Sublevel Zero someday, but I think I will be pretty disappointed at how my 6-degree navigational skills have deteriorated since I was 12. =P Also, the discussion about Descent and then about scary games made me remember that maybe the scariest computer game thing is the cloaking boss on level 7 in Descent 1, at least until you've grown accustomed to it.


  12. I was planning on saying "Lode Runner" as a half-joke but am glad to see it was mentioned already. =)

     

    Age of Empires 2 had a pretty phenomenal RTS editor (and its trigger system was one of the first things I remember using that was sort-of-like-programming).


  13. My goal for this is just to make a 2D platformer character controller that feels good to use. I haven't made many games, and I've made 0 where the 'feel' is right. The level itself could be an empty room for all I care, with no art assets.

     

    This is a good idea for a 2-day entry. If I encounter a jam in the future that I want to participate in but don't feel like making a full game, maybe I'll do a polish-a-single-mechanic idea like this. :tup:

     

    P.S. Bonus points if you come up with an ability for Recusin'. :P