Archive for June, 2008

Blizzard mines my 90s-era gaming memories

Monday, June 30th, 2008

I was pointedly concise with my reaction, but it should be clear enough that I am fairly excited about the just-announced Diablo III. With the possible exception of Tetris, Diablo II almost certainly tops my personal lifetime list of most gameplay hours dedicated to a single game. For some five years or so, my friends and I played it off and on - several of those years considerably more “on.” I just reinstalled it the other day, and have reached Act IV.

Along with the inevitable internet furor that has arisen in the wake of the announcement (and in the days leading up to it, as the storm cryptically but powerfully approached), there has come an explosion of gamer-generated research to try and sate the hunger for rapidly-depleting new information about the game.  Much of this deals with singling out the personalities behind the game–and though none of this is secret information by any means, I have not seen it centralized or given full context.  So here you are.

First off, Leonard Boyarsky–one of the three co-leads on the original Fallout–now serves as lead world designer on Diablo III. Boyarsky also contributed to Fallout II before leaving with the other members of the original Fallout big three (Tim Cain and Jason Anderson) to create Troika Games.  He’s been at Blizzard for nearly three years now, and in an upcoming Gamasutra interview (look for it on Wednesday) he notes the game has been in the works since 2004.

Then, we’ve got Dustin Browder, a former Westwood Studios employee who lead the Red Alert 2 and Command & Conquer: Generals projects (more…)

DIABLO MOTHERFUCKING 3

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

Hell. Yes.

Video Game Voice Acting Advice II: The…

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

In the comments of my last post, my esteemed Thumbs colleague Duncan pointed out another terrible property of most video game voice recording, one on which I have often commented elsewhere.  It is the tendency of voice actors, under poor direction or using poor scripts, to perform an interrupted statement by actually stopping where the ellipses or dash occurs in the script, rather than actually being interrupted.

Now, in this case, it’s slightly more understandable.  I realize that most games aren’t budgeted to actually have actors in the same room during the same session, able to play off one another and cut each other off if the script calls for it.  But, in the end, there’s really no reason the actor can’t simply record a longer version of the line, and have a sound designer or editor cut it off convincingly.

There’s also no excuse for that unintentional pregnant pause that inevitably occurs between the end of the interrupted actor’s painfully weak trail off into ellipses, and the so-called interruption.  With the amazing dynamic sound blending and manipulation that goes on across five channels in so many of today’s games, it should not be too much to expect a sound engine that can, in a completely pre-scripted sequence, position two recordings close enough to one another to produce a vaguely realistically abrupt interruption during a–

Sound designer: Can’t be done, you see, because–

Snake: METAL GEAR?!

Attention…voice…directors…must…urgent advice!

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Attention all video game writers voice acting directors:

When you have a voice line that is intended to sound like a corrupted, spotty voice transmission, from which words are missing in order to convey a sense of urgent desperation and loss of control, please record the actor reading a version from which the words are not missing, and then have your sound team edit it to actually sound corrupted and garbled.

On top of that, how preposterous must it feel as a voice actor to actually perform something like that? I realize that video games aren’t necessarily the cream of the prose crop to begin with, but this is more of a technical issue than a creative one.

Come on, now. This isn’t hard. Why do, time and time again, video games feature actors actually reading the lines with the words omitted? It is painful to my ears to hear a person reading something like, “Can’t being overrun oh God we’re Johnson is please help they’re here and.” Except there are pauses in between every other word which my brain, after a lifetime of interacting with humans and being able to discern what an artificial pause sounds like, is supposed to interpret as signal loss.

That is awful. Really, guys. If you’re spending tens of millions of dollars on a game, especially a dialogue-centric game, you can afford to write a few extra words for the two instances of this scenario in your massive script of hundreds of pages, and yet I hear this cringe-inducing faked transmission crap all the time. BioWare, pay attention.

It isn’t that hard! It won’t even increase your budget! I promise!

That’s a lot of plot delivery

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

I think I’ve had my monthly fill of cutscenes.  In the last six hours or so, I completed both Metal Gear Solid 4 and Mass Effect.

And then I won three rounds of Catan.

Thank you, Tim Russert

Friday, June 13th, 2008

It is extremely rare for me to feel deeply, personally affected by the passing of public figures–certainly, it is never good news to see the death of somebody who is widely loved or respected, but it generally doesn’t strike me to my core.

I can’t say that about Tim Russert, the longtime moderator of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” who unexpectedly passed away after a heart attack today at the age of 58.

Though I do not work in the same field of journalism as Russert, and though the field in which I do work can only barely even be called “journalism,” Tim Russert has had a massive effect on me both professionally and even to an extent personally.

Nobody defines journalistic preparedness, professionalism, and integrity to the extent that did Tim Russert. In the modern age of the 24-hour news cycle that spans print, broadcast, and online, political coverage has become more and more commoditized, factionalized, and truncated. Tim Russert was absolutely a bastion of true, stand-up, incisive but not exploitative journalism.

His “Meet the Press” was a full hour of relevant, engaging, and substantive political interviewing, and his wealth of knowledge of and passion for the subject matter was unparalleled. It is fair to say that a political figure cannot truly be considered to be part of the political discourse without having appeared on Russert’s “Meet the Press.”

Both within and beyond that news hour, Tim Russert was always remarkably even-handed and well-composed yet powerful in his insight, his commentary, and his sheer command of the political landscape. The contrast between his warm, steady demeanor and the frantic, often derisive style of so many other current-day news commentators is striking–all the more so because even without that spectacle, he always managed to unpretentiously, humbly remain the smartest, most respected person in the room.

Regardless of profession, the people in this world for whom I reserve the most respect are those who do what they do with genuine passion and with true integrity. Those people can be found in every field, but few can be found who exhibit those traits so greatly and so visibly as Tim Russert, a journalist whom I, even as a mere viewer, respect intensely and will miss enormously.

Who is Spore for?*

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

The question about Spore’s true audience is something that remains unanswered by pretty much everybody–potentially even including the development team to some extent, as far as I can tell.

But that doesn’t mean I’m not looking forward to it. Probably like a lot of gamers, I’ve gone through something of an Spore excitement sine curve. I recently checked some of the game out over at Will Wright’s Emeryville studio, however, and I’m now climbing back up to the apex of that curve, mainly due to an extended conversation with Soren Johnson, lead designer of Civilization IV and now on Wright’s team. Like most people, he wasn’t able to nail down who the game’s target is–more encouragingly, he indicated Wright is rarely as concerned about that than he is about simply making whatever game he wants to make, which is uncommon in the games industry and fairly ridiculous within EA, but hey, he made The Sims.

He did make me excited, though. One of Johnson’s roles on the team is to serve as something of an advocate for core gamers, to ensure Spore is an experience they can not only tolerate but enjoy. It’s a fitting role; while Spore consists of numerous gameplay phases, it is most dominantly a strategy game, and Johnson comes from one of the industry’s premier strategy developers. He even successfully lobbied the team to put in three levels of difficulty, to ensure those who want some level of challenge can get it. The thought of a game that cycles through individually-playable homages to Pac-Man, Diablo, Civilization, Populous, and more is one that the nostalgic gamer in me cannot refuse.

The full transcript of my chat with Johnson, conducted with my coworker Brandon Sheffield, will be up on Gamasutra at some point in the future, but for now you can check out the rest of my thoughts on Spore (also now up at our blog GameSetWatch), including different demographic angles and the impressive social features the team has planned.

*Correctly, “For whom is Spore?” The More You Know.

Hey jerks, this is how you do a Goddamn PC port

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

When Mass Effect was released, I noted that I would love to see a game like this (or, really, this very game) with much of the combat stripped away, putting the gameplay emphasis on the already-excellent dialogue system that provides a framework for hugely enjoyable social interactions. You can help characters, confound them, double-cross them–it was, and it remains, the best part of the game for me.

But I will say this: while I would still be enormously interested in a game–many games!–such as the one I describe, I picked up Demiurge Studios’ PC version of Mass Effect this week and it almost feels like a whole new game. (more…)

I need to get into a different industry

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Last night, I dreamt that the major executives of Funcom were attempting to dominate the world with some kind of enormous Metal Gear-like weapon.

I was witnessing this on a highway in my car, greatly distressed, so I emailed Ragnar Tornquist, Funcom employee and designer of The Longest Journey, with a brief but impassioned plea for salvation.  The email read something like this:

“Ragnar,

I hope this message will do some good.  I don’t know if you know what’s going on, and you might even be involved since your company is behind it, but for the good of the world you need to help.”

Mr. Tornquist then flew overhead and, using a strategy similar to that of Fox’s final smash in Super Smash Bros. Brawl,  dropped an enormous tank onto his coworkers’ Metal Gear, and that is how the designer of The Longest Journey saved the world in my idiotic, inexplicable dreams.