Thursday, December 31, 2009

New Year's Celebration in SecondLife

Linden Lab set up an area to shoot off fireworks every hour as the new year rolls in around the globe

Here's a pic at about 4am SLT. That's a replica of the Time Square crystal ball on the pole


At 1 minute to the top of the hour, the ball started falling slowly down the pole. Then some pretty cool fireworks. Here's a picture. I"ll try again a couple more times today to get pictures now that i know what to expect.



A couple more pictures



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Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Final version of the Game Design class games

Each of the 9 students in the class had to create their own unique videogame using the GameMaker software. They had to create the game, multiple levels, the art, and music/sounds. They're not all polished masterpieces. Each game represents the work of one single student for about 5 weeks - with help from their friends. They helped each other out with polishing ideas and debugging problems. They discovered that the design process takes much longer than they thought and the actual coding even longer that that. This was their first attempt at making a videogame. They're not completely satisfied with their games in some cases and i'd like to see them keep working on their games. But for the time they had and the fact that we sprung on them the fact that they would be working by themselves right as the project started, the games came out pretty good. There's an element of fun in most - and that's a big first step in making games.

Feel free to play the games on the yoyogames.com site. You can leave the students comments there too or enter a review of the game. You can leave comments here too on this post and i'll pass them along. Just be sure to mention what game you're talking about.



Monday, December 21, 2009

End of the semester reactions to SecondLife

The students int eh Games & Society class had to write a final paper with their reactions to being content creators and consumers in SecondLife, plus anything else they wanted to say about their experiences.

Overall, the reactions were pretty positive. Maybe they were just blowing smoke up my skirt (figuratively since I don't wear skirts in class) to get a better grade. But I'm going to take them on face value.

Here's what theyliked
avatar customization
building tools
socializing with people from around the world
ability to host events
ability to create stuff
people were nice to them
people came to their party
people came to their presntations at the end of the semester
haunted mansions at Halloween


Here's what they didn't like
slow servers and software that just acted up occasionally
building took a lot of time
no goals, not clear what to do
no leveling up
limited game play
no good tutorials at the beginning - bad newbie experiences

Some thought SL should focus on builders and developers. Some thought SL should focus more on gamers. Others realized SL's future for business presentations. But they thought about SL and compared it to other things they know. This is a great improvement over some past classes who couldn't get any handle on what SL was. So I'm happy.

In reality, most won't use it again unless they have another class with me in the spring semester. But a few will. I was excited that they all managed to build things, they all went shopping and spent lindens; and they all talked to other people in the virtual world.And they all have had the expeirence of being content creators in a world that values such creators. That was one of my goals. And I think we accomplished that and much more. I was happy with how the semester turned out in terms of SL use. I'd do it again.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Had some good presentations

We've had quite a few people drop by to check out the posters and presentations.

Here are some pictures. The first ones rae from the poster session area. The students for the most part created cubes and textured them with info from their reports. I discovered that most of them did not know how to use photoshop or GIMP so we had to make a quick detour into a few basics there. They uploaded their graphics, creating textures.



 

 

 

 

 



Here is a photo from one of the panel discussions. Their topic ws the newbie experience in SL. They created a new avatar and documented what they saw  in the first couple of hours. They had some suggestions for making the experience better for new users that might have been presented a bit better, but we'll work on that in the future. Their photos are now over in the poster session area.

 


We learned a few things for the future
  • get the windows up wiht the options to ban people from the island (we had a few griefers)
  • have a notecard for people to evaluate the speakers to give the students feedback (just like a real conference)
  • having the talks at different times works great. Students can work around their schedules. We attracted audiences from many time zones. We need to have some a bit more convenient for folks in Australia for instance.
  • students need to practice presenting in SL. Some got nervous and didn't talk long enough. One student turned to move his presentation slide to the front during a panel discussion and then forgot to turn his avatar back around to face the audience.
  • posters need marked out areas in which to set up. Ours got crowded at one end. This congests the visitors and it's hard to follow one presentation out of many conversations.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Student presentations off to a good start

Rob Jeruben (SL name of one of my students) gave the first poster session today from my Games & SOciety class. He talked about casual MMOs and SL. We had 10 or 11 people come by and most stayed for his whole talk. They asked great questions and he did an admirable job answering them all.People in the audience were impressed with his performance too. One was a blogger from Massively (a blog about MMOs that is widely read). She posted an article about the presentations too - click here to go to the post. An IC administrator came (YAY David Garcia!). Several educators from around the world were there too. An interesting mix of people.  I'll put the schedule for the rest of the talks at the end of this post.

Here are a couple of pictures I took.



 

 

 

Hopefully the rest will come off just as smoothly. I'll post more pictures each day.

Here's the schedule. All times are in Pacific Standard Time - that's what SL uses as it's standard since the company that runs it is in San Francisco.

Panel Presentation (held at the outdoor amphitheatre)
http://slurl.com/secondlife/Park%20Communication/89/118/29

 Monday 1:30-2:30pm - Elijah, Kyle, Chris

Tuesday 5-6am -  David, Dan, Brian,Jamison

Tuesday 9-10am - MIke, Mary, Zach

Wednesday 10-11 am - Chris, Nat, Sam

Thursday 9:30 - 10:30am - John, Gannon, Tom

Thursday 4:30-5:30pm - Ashley, Alyssa, Will

Poster Session (held by the boat docks on the big green carpeted area)
http://slurl.com/secondlife/Park%20Communication/151/137/24

Monday 1:30-2:30pm - Sarah, Colleen

Tuesday 6:30-7:30am - Jymmy, Gabe, Ethan

Tuesday 8-9am - Luke, Adam, Zach, Sean

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Semester coming to a close

One almost down and one to go (semesters at IC that is)

Thursday the game design students will be play testing their GameMaker creations. We got 9 pretty good looking games - platformers, scrollers, werewolves, surfing, fighters... They need fresh eyes to play their games and find any mistakes they may have overlooked.

We're putting all the games up on YoYo Games site.  We'll test the games. The students have a week to fix them up. THey'll be up on the YoYo Games site then for posterity.

Play the games and please, leave the students some comments.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Students are Building!

Man I like writing that - building in SL is something I really enjoy. Hoperfully some of the students will catch the building bug too.

Here are a couple of pictures of things they built for their first experiments - they had to use 5 different shapes, apply textures, and link the shapes. We have rockets, a cheeseburger, a boxing rink, sheep, a basketball hoop, cool abstract shapes, a giant face, a treehouse....some cool stuff!


Monday, November 09, 2009

LInk to the games from this weekend's 24 hour game jam

24 Hour Game Jam sponsored by the IC Game Developers Club
The grups had to make a multi-level game using this quote as a constraint - "If you follow all the rules, you miss most the fun". Both groups decided to use GameMaker, software from YoYo Games.

Paradoxical Irony
Team consisted of Ashley Alicea (art), Ryan Giglio (programming), Carson Kjep (programming), and William Sisskind (level design). They all worked on the basic idea and how to implement the constraint
http://www.yoyogames.com/games/show/102725

Here are a few screen shots. More are available on request.




Team consisted of Corey Jeffers, Chris Hendrickson, Jymmy Hayes, Greg Schulz, Jacob Gergh, Megan Crosen

 

Sunday, November 08, 2009

They survived - 24 hours of game making is successfully over!

The two groups both finished their games right at 2pm, 24 hours after their start. Each game had levels, theme music, obstacles, a win condition. One group kind of lost their way and need to do some rethinking, but their game was playable. The other group kept their original goal simple and tuck with it - although they did rethink how to program it about 2AM.

Here are a couple of screen shots:

Paradoxical Irony



Jimmy's Crusade




THe students are fixing a couple of last minute bugs they found when they played them. THen they'll put the games up on the YoYoGames website. WHen that happens I will put the links up so you can play them too. They're also supposed to give me some art and screen shots and post mortems. I'll post them too.

Here are some pictures of the students playing each others games. Everybody was offering advice on strategy and cheering as level after level was completed.



 

 

A reporter covered the event so if a story appears I'll link to it.I think everyone had a great time. We're all excited about going to the Global Game Jam in January 2010. THey learned to work together and draw on each other's talents.

A very successful first time event. Here's hoping for many more!




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The Game Jam is Still Going

6:30 aM - Sunday morning and the groups are doing good work. They have plans on the chalk boards and tasks are actually crossed out. Whew. One group has a (hand drawn and awesome looking) dinosaur skeleton in their background and it's called Jimmy's Crusade. The other group has a game name now - Pardoxical Irony.




The rooms look lived in - there are pillow and cups and RedBull cans and chip bags laying around. We even have one person asleep! (well - there were 2 but i got up a couple of minutes ago)





And here are people hard at work.




 







Sunday Noon - people are dragging. Turns out overnight both groups scrapped a lot of their code and came at their ideas in different ways. For one group it seems to be working out (Paradoxical Irony). The other group is having some issues. But nobody's throwing chairs or cussing more than normal. Jimmy's Crusade is pretty sure they lost the fun somewhere. We'll see here in 90 minutes. The art guys are cranking out some interesting assets - dinosaur and lunchboxes, water and animated fire. Here are some pictures from noonish.




Saturday, November 07, 2009

24 HOUR GAME JAM IS ON!

From 2pm Saturday to 2pm Sunday, people are cranking out videogames at Ithaca College in a 24 Hour Game Jam sponsored by our IC Game Developers Club. 2 groups, 2 games. It's fun in and of itself. But it's also a warm up for the Global Game Jam in January that we hope to send a big group to.

They have to use this quote somehow in the game - If you follow all the rules, you miss the fun. It might be inspiration, might become a line of dialogue...it's up to the students.

Group 1 - Carson Kjep, Ryan Giglio, William Sisskind, Ashley Alicea
Group 2 - Chris  "The Guitar Hero" Hendrickson, Jymmy "Skwee-G" Hayes, Corey "Ronin-Rampant" Jeffers, Jacob "still thinking of a nickname" Gergh, Megan "Red" Crosen

We have the major food groups - salt, sugar, and soda. We'll be adding protein I"m sure (do goldfish crackers count as protein?) And coffee - probably lots of coffee.

I'll add pictures here and updates on their progress. If you're on campus, come check us out in Williams 218 and 219. If you're off campus, leave comments here and give us some encouragement. Saturday's pictures and updates are in this post. Sunday's pics and updates are in the next post - http://profkim.blogspot.com/2009/11/game-jam-is-still-going.html


 



 Supper break about 7 - pizza (the other basic food group). We watched some music videos for a mental break.





10pm - 8 hours in. The teams have levels being planned, characters being sketched and animated, and game mechanics being hashed out. Everybody is looking pretty energetic except our student in Italy who's off fora couple of hours of sleep since it's really really late there already - that's him in the skype box on the computer screen.









MIdnight - well - 1AM - everybody is still pretty much moving and working. We had to take a break for a Bombers party sub from Rogans. They deliver at 12:30. Very weird sammich too - philly cheesesteak and breaded boneless buffalo chicken strips. Now they've opened up the Red Bull. Ewww! That's all I have to say about that.


The art "departments" are cranking out sprites and backgrounds. The level designers are trying to come up with cool levels (these games have to have at least 3 levels). The programmers are trying to make GameMaker do what they want and that involves (as most programming does) a lot of cussing.


 






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