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Computer Game Development By Jijun Tang
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Contents for the Presentation Group members, group name, logo Description, specification, goals, game play System requirement, audience, rating Interface, input/output, interactions, cameras Premise/limitations/choices/resources Content designs/3D/2D/animation, audio Level designs, flexibility/scripting language? Version control/testing strategy/documentation Brief timeline (demo date is early Dec)
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Homework Game treatment document Each group to turn in one Due: Sept 17 th, before class Print and bring it in class Expected page lengths 4-5 pages, 11pt font, single space.
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Example of Treatment http://www.csc.kth.se/utbildning/kth/kur ser/DH2650/spel08/The%20Game%20 Treatment.doc
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Requirement
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Highlights
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Production Details
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Game World
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Examples http://pyrrha.csisdmz.ul.ie/4075/treatment.html
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Premise Story is the typical example of premise Time Place Characters Relationships Motivations Etc.
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Choice and Outcome Well-designed choice Often desirable and undesirable effects Should relate to player goals Balanced against neighboring choices Too much weight to every choice is melodrama Orthogonal choices – distinct from others Not just “ shades of grey ”
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Resources/Economies Resources Things used by agents to reach goals To be meaningful, they must be … Useful – provide some value Limited – in total or rate of supply Economies Systems of supply, distribution, consumption Questions regarding game economies: What resources exist? How and when will resources be used? How and when will resources be supplied? What are their limits?
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Interface Typical perspectives: First-person Over-the-shoulder (OTS) Overhead (top-down) Side Isometric
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First person
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OTS
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Overhead and Side
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Isometric
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Audio Interface General categories of audio Music Powerful tool for establishing mood and theme Pay attention to license issues The campus is cited 960 times last year Sound effects Dialog
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Example
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Huds
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System Design Two general approaches to design Special case Experiences built one scene/level at a time Anticipate states while pre-scripting events Solved by discovering the intentions of the designer Systemic General behaviors are designed Scenes/Levels are specific configurations Some events may still be pre-scripted Solved by understanding the system
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Cybernetics Study of communication, control, and regulation Model
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Cybernetic System A basic cybernetic system has: Sensor – detects a condition Thermometer Comparator – evaluates the information Switch Activator – alters the environment when triggered by the comparator
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Example System
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Feedback Feedback: information about the internal or external changes of system that make the system adjust its output The portion of a system ’ s output that is returned into the system Feedback Loop The path taken by the feedback
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Positive Feedback Amplify changes Leads to runaway behavior Difficult to make use of From Bob Craig
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Negative feedback Counteracts changes Leads to goal seeking behaviors Most common form in systems From Bob Craig
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Feedbacks in a Game Negative feedback Stabilizes the game Forgives the loser Prolongs the game Magnifies late successes Positive feedback Destabilizes the game Rewards the winner Can end the game Magnifies early successes
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Platforms Platform: General description of hardware and software Personal computer – PC, Mac, etc. Console – Wii, PlayStation, Xbox, etc. Handheld – DS, Game Boy Advance, PSP, etc. Mobile device – Cell Phones, NGage, PDA, etc. Arcade – custom vending games (e.g. Time Crisis) PC Games compared to other platforms: PC Games are developed and used in the same platform, other platforms may require proprietary development kits. Console games are popular because consoles are used in a “lean-back” position, while PC is used in a “sit-forward
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Game Saves Save triggers: automatically saved at certain points Disadvantage: Player has little control Save-anywhere Allow the player to save the state at any point in the game Disadvantage: System needs to save many different variables, also may make it too easy for the player Save points: Save only the accumulated points Disadvantage: Rather limited Coded text saves to save a bit space Do you really want user to save?
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Genres Genre – a category describing generalities of conventions, style, and content
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Major Genres Action Adventure Arcade Casual Education Fighting First-person shooter Platform Racing Rhythm Role-Playing (RPG) Simulation Sports Strategy Puzzle Traditional
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Audiences Target audience Group of expected consumers Age, gender income … What does your audience know? What does your audience demand? Demographics Study of relevant economic and social statistics about a given population Demographic variables The relevant factors
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Audiences Market Demographic segmentation of consumers Market segments: Smaller sub-segment of the market; more tightly defined Demographic profile Typical consumer attributes in a market Age, Social class, gender etc.
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Audiences Heavy Users Those of the numeric minority of potential users responsible for majority of sales of any product 80/20 rule: in anything a few (20 percent) are vital and many(80 percent) are trivial. Hardcore gamer Game industry term for heavy video game users Casual gamer Game industry term for all other gamers
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Hardcore Players Play games over long sessions Discuss games frequently and at length Knowledgeable about the industry Higher threshold for frustration Desire to modify or extend games creatively Have the latest game systems Engage in competition with themselves, the game, and others
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Design Procedure Waterfall method Development methodology Design and production are broken into phases Iterative development Practice of producing things incrementally Refining and re-refining the product May iterate many cycles before get it right
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Waterfall vs. Iterative testing
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Prototypes Early working models of the product Used to test ideas and techniques Physical prototypes Non-electronic models; physical materials Software prototypes Used regularly during iterative development
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Other Document Types Preliminary design document Initial Design Document Revised Design Document General Design Document Expanded Design Document Technical Design Document Final Design Document
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Communication-Flowcharts Flowcharts A typical technique for diagramming steps in a process Most developers are familiar
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Example Flowcharts
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Communication-Diagrams Associative diagram Drawing that helps manage and organize information visually Mind Map A style of associative diagram Key words and figures are placed on branches
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Psychology Working Memory Holds roughly 7 ± 2 items at one time while other cognitive operations on them Each slide should not have more than 6 items Attention Method of enhancing perceptions relative to other stimuli in the same environment How we focus on important things Limited capacity
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Psychology Classical conditioning Reaction to stimulus is conditioned by pairing with another stimulus that elicits the desired response naturally
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Psychology Unconditioned stimulus – Meat Unconditioned response – Salivation over meat Conditioned stimulus – Tone Conditioned response – Salivation over tone
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Psychology Operant conditioning Learning by encouraging or discouraging Operant A response; the action in question Example: pressing a button Reinforcement contingency Consistent relationship between the operant and a result in the environment
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Psychology Reinforcers Increase the probability an action will be repeated Positive reinforcement Positive stimulus that reinforces the behavior Ex. Use umbrella and be dry Negative reinforcement The removal or prevention of a negative stimulus Ex. Use umbrella and keep from getting wet Punishment Reduces the likelihood of a behavior with a stimulus Ex. Being burned by a hot stove
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Programming Teams In the 1980s programmers developed the whole game (and did the art and sounds too!) Now programmers write code to support designers and artists (content creators)
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A Team Picture
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Different Programs Game code Anything related directly to the game Game engine Any code that can be reused between different games Tools In house tools Plug-ins for off-the-shelf tools
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Team Organization Programmers often have a background in Computer Science or sciences They usually specialize in some area (AI, graphics, networking) but know about all other areas Teams usually have a lead programmer They sometimes have a lead for each of the major areas
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Skills and Personalities Successful teams have a mix of personalities and skills: Experience vs. new ideas Methodical vs. visionary But hard-working is always the key
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Methodologies A methodology describes the procedures followed during development to create a game Every company has a methodology (way of doing things), even if they don't explicitly think about it
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Methodologies: Code and Fix Unfortunately very common Little or no planning Always reacting to events Poor quality and unreliability of finished product “Crunch” time normal
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Methodologies: Waterfall Very well-defined steps in development Lots of planning ahead of time Great for creating a detailed milestone schedule Doesn't react well to changes Game development is too unpredictable for this approach
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Methodologies: Iterative Multiple development cycles during a single project Each delivering a new set of functionality Refinements are needed The game could ship at any moment Allows for planning but also for changes
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Methodologies: Agile Methods Deal with the unexpected Very short iterations: 2-3 weeks Iterate based on feedback of what was learned so far Very good visibility of state of game Difficult for publishers or even developers to adopt because it's relatively new
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Make Coding Easier Version control Coding standards Automated build Code review Unit testing and acceptance testing
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Version Control Recommended to use for team project Version control is Database with all the files and history. Only way to work properly with a team. Branching and merging can be very useful Used for source code as well as game assets (text and binary) Tools: CVS is one of the most popular tool Source anywhere SVN
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Coding standards Coding standards are Set of coding rules for the whole team to follow Improves readability and maintainability of the code Easier to work with other people's code They vary a lot from place to place Some simple, some complex Get used to different styles Sample standards can be found at: http://www.chris- lott.org/resources/cstyle/CppCodingStandard.htmlhttp://www.chris- lott.org/resources/cstyle/CppCodingStandard.html
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Automated builds Dedicated build server builds the game from scratch Takes the source code and creates an executable Also takes assets and builds them into game-specific format Build must never break
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Quality Control Code reviews Knowing others will read the code will make coding more carefully Another programmer reads over some code and tries to find problems Sometimes done before code is committed to version control Can be beneficial if done correctly Follow coding standards, and put comments
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Avoid Run-time Errors Run-time errors are hardest to trace and have the biggest damage Initialize variables, use tools (Visual.Net is good at this), check boundaries, etc. purify on Windows valgrind on Linux Asserts and crashes Use asserts anytime the game could crash or something could go very wrong An assert is a controlled crash in the debug version Much easier to debug and fix Happens right where the problem occurred Don't use them for things that a user could do Open a non-existing file Press the wrong button
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