As mentioned earlier we want the player’s actions to have a meaningful affect on the game. This past week we discussed how the vigilantes' personalities could be affected by the player’s actions.
During the first mission the dialogue between the vigilantes during the mission briefing and the mission itself will be impersonal, cold and professional. As the game progresses the dialogue will become more personal as the vigilantes reveal more of their personality, which will be based on the player's actions.
Our current idea for someone that only completes each mission through non-lethal means is that the vigilantes will become sad as they see no end in sight for their campaign. On the other hand someone that only uses lethal means will become angry, as they let their rage from what led them to become vigilantes consume themselves. For someone that uses a mixture of the two their personality will become psychotic or unbalanced as they are unable to reconcile their feelings about their actions one way or the other.
About
Remote Shepherd is the capstone project for Long Shot Games, a group of five graduate students in RIT's Game Design and Development masters program. The game allows the player to step into the shoes of a group of vigilantes who have decided to put their skills gained as Marine Scout Snipers to use in cleaning their city of criminal organizations. This blog will track both the ongoing design and development of the project.
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Showing posts with label Player Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Player Action. Show all posts
Friday, February 4, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Where is the Agency
A common critique of Remote Shepherd is “Where’s the agency?” Our initial answer to this question was that the NPCs would react to shots fired at or near them. However this did not stop the question, so we had to sit down and think how the player’s actions would affect the game. Our current answer is that what the player does will lead to a certain outcome for a mission. Each outcome for a mission fits into one of three categories; lethal, non-lethal or arrest.
Lethal outcomes involve the death of an NPC where as non-lethal requires that no one has been killed. The next mission will depend on which of these two categories the outcome of the previous mission fit into. The arrest outcome happens when, through their actions, the police are able to locate each of the three snipers, ending the game. When the player is arrested they view a cutscene showing a conclusion to anything that has happened in the game.
We decided to place a heavy cost to all of the player’s actions, influenced by Heavy Rain. Everything the player does has some type of effect on how the game’s story unfolds. If a player just starts shooting randomly into the crowd they will be arrested quicker, leading to the end of the game. The player’s choice to use lethal or non-lethal action will also shape how the story unfolds by changing the missions.
Lethal outcomes involve the death of an NPC where as non-lethal requires that no one has been killed. The next mission will depend on which of these two categories the outcome of the previous mission fit into. The arrest outcome happens when, through their actions, the police are able to locate each of the three snipers, ending the game. When the player is arrested they view a cutscene showing a conclusion to anything that has happened in the game.
We decided to place a heavy cost to all of the player’s actions, influenced by Heavy Rain. Everything the player does has some type of effect on how the game’s story unfolds. If a player just starts shooting randomly into the crowd they will be arrested quicker, leading to the end of the game. The player’s choice to use lethal or non-lethal action will also shape how the story unfolds by changing the missions.
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