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7 votes
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How Embracer's cuts killed a potential Red Faction sequel and gutted a promising studio
13 votes -
Former Square Enix exec on why Final Fantasy sales don’t meet expectations and chances of recouping insane AAA budgets
42 votes -
Embracing chaos - how Hyper Light Breaker survived 2023
3 votes -
Take-Two publishes WARN notice about seventy layoffs and studio closure in Seattle, possibly affecting Kerbal Space Program 2 developers Intercept Games
Take-Two posted a legally-required notice that it is laying off 70 workers and closing a studio in Seattle. This is part of mass layoffs announced across Take-Two. This has also been mentioned by...
Take-Two posted a legally-required notice that it is laying off 70 workers and closing a studio in Seattle. This is part of mass layoffs announced across Take-Two. This has also been mentioned by Games Industry.biz, although without much more details than what I have here (at time of writing).
The only Take-Two studio in Seattle is Intercept Games, who have been making Kerbal Space Program 2. We also know that Intercept had about 65-70 people working there (half of which were on KSP2, half of which were on an unannounced project).
Various KSP2 devs have also posted on social media that they have been impacted by layoffs (not sure about the rules re: linking social media profiles, so I'll hold off).
We may or may not have more news in the coming days. It's hard times in the industry right now, and my heart goes out for everyone affected.
EDIT: From Game Developer:
When approached for comment by Game Developer, Take-Two wouldn't confirm whether Intercept Games has been impacted by the cuts–despite multiple Kerbal Space Program developers indicating they recently left the studio, with one expressly stating they were "laid off." A company spokesperson did, however, explain that its Private Division publishing label will continue to support Kerbal Space Program 2.
...
When pushed again on the current status of Intercept Games, Take-Two told Game Developer it has "nothing further to note."
31 votes -
The making of Pentiment
7 votes -
How hidden Nazi symbols were the tip of a toxic iceberg at Life Is Strange developer Deck Nine
30 votes -
Balatro's 'cursed' design problem
18 votes -
Riot's League of Legends MMO is being 'reset,' likely going dark for 'several years'
28 votes -
Overwatch 2 devs fear story missions have been canceled
15 votes -
Is anyone else at GDC?
If so, how's it going for you? Go to any interesting talks or events? Meet anyone new?
18 votes -
Star Wars: Battlefront Classic Collection used modder's work without credit
34 votes -
Building a full adventure map in Valheim - Start to finish
13 votes -
Apple terminates Epic Games developer account calling it a ‘threat’ to the iOS ecosystem
57 votes -
EA cutting 5% of workforce
23 votes -
Fully documented source code for Lander on the Acorn Archimedes
8 votes -
The best game animation of 2023
3 votes -
Frustrations with Cities: Skylines II are starting to boil over among city builder fans and content creators alike
30 votes -
Returning to Monkey Island
15 votes -
Grounded II: Making The Last of Us Part II
8 votes -
The making of NHL 94: 30th anniversary documentary
15 votes -
The personal, political art of board-game design
6 votes -
The making of NHL 94 - 30th anniversary documentary
15 votes -
Why Cities: Skylines II performs poorly – the teeth are not the only problem
23 votes -
Deltarune Chapter 2 development team interview
14 votes -
How Alan Wake II, one of gaming's lost sequels, finally got made
8 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: The Last Express
6 votes -
Why games are too big
11 votes -
The making of the Burger King games
19 votes -
Unity: An open letter to our community
54 votes -
Collective letter from game development companies concerning Unity's runtime fee
36 votes -
Gauntlet IV: “Game needs port, badly”
13 votes -
Sparrow Solitaire for Playdate
16 votes -
Why the liquids in Half-Life: Alyx look so dang good
34 votes -
Tencent to become majority shareholder of Techland
19 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: Diablo
17 votes -
From prototypes to future tech: How PS VR2 was built. New insight into the multi-year development process behind the PlayStation VR2 hardware.
5 votes -
Anyone here playing / participating GMTK Game Jam?
I thought it'd be fun to have our own recommendation list before the final results are announced. Here's the link to the theme announcement video (the theme is "Role Reversed") and link to the...
I thought it'd be fun to have our own recommendation list before the final results are announced.
Here's the link to the theme announcement video (the theme is "Role Reversed") and link to the itch.io page where you can find all the entries. The default sort is 'random' but you can also change to other Sort if you just want to quickly check out some more notable examples. Also select 'Play in browser' in 'Platform' if you're worried about having to download files.
If you participated in the jam, let us know too!
Edit: since the mountain of entries is enormous, I'm thinking a way to narrow the scope and reduce choice paralysis is this: try out 3 entries that caught your interest for whatever reason, and tell us which one among them you like most (you can recommend all of them, or try out more if you're up for it). Feel free to be as loose or selective in your recommendation as you want.
15 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 -
Ben Rosset posts about the design behind The Search for Lost Species (the Search for Planet X successor)
2 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-ecslib (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 -
Game Jam 2023 just kicked off!
7 votes -
The genius AI behind The Sims
8 votes -
A dialog in Real Time Strategy - The early years of competition between Blizzard and Westwood
18 votes -
Behind the road tools | Developer insights #1 | Cities: Skylines II
11 votes -
Pixel art animation reinvented, a simple feature that allows us to easily change the appearance of our characters without the need to recreate every animation - Astortion Devlog #26
11 votes -
Naughty Dog's game design is outdated
6 votes -
Returnal, the PS5 hit, is a master class in porting a console game to PC
4 votes -
Why do God of War's characters keep spoiling puzzles?
1 vote