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2 votes
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Half-Life: 25th anniversary documentary
32 votes -
Beyond 'Killzone': Creating new AI systems for 'Horizon Zero Dawn'
4 votes -
Why Cities: Skylines II performs poorly – the teeth are not the only problem
23 votes -
The Finals uses AI text-to-speech because it can produce lines 'in just a matter of hours rather than months', baffles actual voice actors
28 votes -
How Alan Wake II, one of gaming's lost sequels, finally got made
8 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: The Last Express
6 votes -
Game development caution
8 votes -
The Diorama Engine (from Diora, a Playdate game)
9 votes -
Why games are too big
11 votes -
$600million and a decade later, where is Star Citizen?
38 votes -
Unity: An open letter to our community
54 votes -
We have heard you - Unity says
66 votes -
Terraria dev Re-Logic donates $100K to Godot Engine and FNA, plus ongoing funding
93 votes -
Unity overhauls controversial price hike after game developers revolt
38 votes -
Godot Engine
So, by now everyone knows about the big outcry over Unity's big runtime fee. Even if they backtrack, I foresee MANY developers leaving Unity because the trust has been damaged. So there are two...
So, by now everyone knows about the big outcry over Unity's big runtime fee. Even if they backtrack, I foresee MANY developers leaving Unity because the trust has been damaged. So there are two options to look at now: Unreal and Godot. I have no experience with Godot personally, but I know there are people on here who do.
So, to those with experience with it, here's the chance to share your expertise and knowledge! What do you want new users to know about it? What do you consider its strengths and weaknesses? What resources would you recommend for new users? Any particular tips and tricks? And also, what are some games you know made with it you'd recommend, either to give people ideas of its capabilities or just because they're good games?
98 votes -
Unity is offering a Runtime Fee waiver if you switch to LevelPlay as it tries to “kill AppLovin”
29 votes -
Wait, is Unity allowed to just change its fee structure like that?
60 votes -
Collective letter from game development companies concerning Unity's runtime fee
36 votes -
Gauntlet IV: “Game needs port, badly”
13 votes -
Unity reveals plans to charge per game install, drawing criticism from development community
151 votes -
Saints Row developer Volition permanently shuts down
53 votes -
Super Mario Bros. Wonder is what happens when devs have time to play
23 votes -
How Digital Eclipse set the standard for preserving video game classics with their first Gold Master Series title – The Making of Karateka
8 votes -
Sparrow Solitaire for Playdate
16 votes -
Rewriting wipEout
22 votes -
Defunct studios discussion - Who remembers Black & White?
I just finished playing through the Fata Deum demo and you can really feel the B&W roots, even if it's minus your pet. While there's lots to be excited about off the back of Fata Deum, it does...
I just finished playing through the Fata Deum demo and you can really feel the B&W roots, even if it's minus your pet.
While there's lots to be excited about off the back of Fata Deum, it does kill me that this IP was left for dead considering how innovative the gameplay was at the time and how much potential it had.
Does anyone have fond memories of other hits from now defunct studios?
31 votes -
Introducing the Epic First Run program
26 votes -
Ball und Panzer Golf: Making a Playdate game in a week
16 votes -
A peek into the MTG Arena rules engine: "On Whiteboards, Naps, and Living Breakthrough"
18 votes -
The SDL3 Audio Subsystem
10 votes -
The offbeat, wonderful Keita Takahashi, creator of Katamari
20 votes -
The team behind Super Smash Bros. Brawl
6 votes -
Commander Keen's Adaptive Tile Refresh
18 votes -
Why the liquids in Half-Life: Alyx look so dang good
34 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: Diablo
17 votes -
The making of Vampire Survivors
31 votes -
Any experience with making a board game?
My friend and I embarked upon a journey over the past few months to create a tabletop board game. The interesting part is that we were motivated by the emergence of generative AI and the...
My friend and I embarked upon a journey over the past few months to create a tabletop board game. The interesting part is that we were motivated by the emergence of generative AI and the capabilities it had in rapid prototyping concepts. On a whim we said, let's see how far we can push making a board game. We pushed Midjourney, ChatGPT, and a variety of creative tools to help build the foundation for our game. We both have design chops and are into diy, creative design, and 3d printing, and technology to help get this thing past the finish line.
We are now at the point were after many iterative sessions, we have a functional and fun to play game! Our intention is to give it away as a free downloadable that folks can 3d print and paper print all the parts so they can play too! Huzzah! We are balancing the rules and creating the instructions which is not something we are relying on AI aside sticking to the theme. We are in search of inspirato on what makes gameplay fun for folks today.
Question What are the most fun, exciting, or challenging aspects of any tabletop or board games you play? What keeps you engaged?
EDIT
I didn't give many specifics on the game itself, and figured it might help. Remember we used AI to come up with this storyline. The prompt was to write a story for a "Sci-fi Christmas Horror" board game...The basic premise is that you are attending a party at the North pole celebrating the research of Dr. Frost on ancient Christmas magic. Predictably things go bad, and you have to find your way out before it's too late and you are killed by a troop of Christmas themed monsters.
The games objective is to work together to escape the facility by collecting sleigh parts, fighting monsters, navigating a maze in dark hallways, and visiting special rooms to solve puzzles. It's all kinds of ridiculous but fun it its own way.
12 votes -
Link has more animations than you think
10 votes -
Any Bevy (the rust game engine) users here?
Bevy just released their version 0.11, so I figured it would be a nice opportunity to ask the Tildes gamedevs if they were using it :) Bevy is a rust game engine - more like a set of libraries...
Bevy just released their version 0.11, so I figured it would be a nice opportunity to ask the Tildes gamedevs if they were using it :)
Bevy is a rust game engine - more like a set of libraries actually - that's been gaining popularity the last few years. It has become the de facto toolset if you want to make a game in rust. It is very opinionated towards Entity-Component-System (ECS), and uses the pattern to facilitate parallelism and multi-threading.
Personally, I'm using the
bevy-ecs
lib (not the whole engine) to write a roguelike and hone my skills in rust. I enjoy it but it's not really beginner-friendly. The official docs are lacking, and you'll have to dig in the auto-generated api docs to make the most out of it. However, I appreciate that each release not only brings new features, but also refines existing ones. The engine is getting better - not only bigger - release after release.16 votes -
The making of Noctis, the 'No Man's Sky' forerunner whose creator retreated from the world
12 votes -
Game Jam 2023 just kicked off!
7 votes -
RPG Maker and learning game design
I have been making a game with Rpg maker MZ in my free time. It is a slow process, but it is coming along. With no background or experience with coding, I had attempted to jump into Unity a while...
I have been making a game with Rpg maker MZ in my free time. It is a slow process, but it is coming along. With no background or experience with coding, I had attempted to jump into Unity a while ago, but quickly became overwhelmed and gave up. Rpg Maker has felt like a great onboarding for learning game design. The simplicity of making events, adding in sprites, sound effects, dialog and anything else you want is amazing. I've gone from googling how to do the simplest of things, and now have a full town with npcs, a dungeon with puzzles and a few quests, and usually able to figure out any problems on my own. It feels like my own little world. I even have a small discord that I post updates to and get suggestions/comments from friends and family.
I think when I am done with this demo, I may give Unity another shot. I feel like I have a much better understanding of how to think when designing a game. I know Unity is a much bigger step, but I feel like I can at least see the staircase now.
So I guess my question for you is, what other programs have been instrumental to your game design journey? Have you used Rpg Maker and what are your thoughts on it?
16 votes -
Godot 4.1 is here, smoother, more reliable, and with plenty of new features
16 votes -
What’s a genre or style you wish was explored more in games?
It’s often argued that open-world, zombie survival, and the likes have been overdeveloped and variety needs to be introduced to help stimulate an otherwise stale market. What do you wish upcoming...
It’s often argued that open-world, zombie survival, and the likes have been overdeveloped and variety needs to be introduced to help stimulate an otherwise stale market. What do you wish upcoming games had that the others do not? Were there any titles that just fell shy of your expectations?
66 votes -
The genius AI behind The Sims
8 votes -
Making games
14 votes -
Solarus, a lightweight, multiplatform, free and open-source 2D game engine
19 votes -
The famous Nuclear Gandhi glitch in Civilization is a hoax
52 votes -
Finland games industry disappointed by new immigration reforms – 30% of the industry is made up of gaming professionals that have immigrated to the country
10 votes