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24 Hours With LittleBigPlanet
Posted by
Soulskill
on Thu Sep 25, 2008 04:32 PM
from the playing-in-the-sand dept.
from the playing-in-the-sand dept.
We recently mentioned an event at the Parsons New School for Design and Technology in which students were divided into teams, given copies of LittleBigPlanet, and had 24 hours to develop levels for the game. GameSetWatch has the story of how the design contest went, what the winners and other notable finishers designed, and how the judges were surprised that "what they played could be completed in 24 hours." Further coverage is available at GameSpot, including a videos of several different levels. "Team Good Sportsmanship's level consisted of a single massive moving monster. SackBoy had to find his way up the monster, go through its digestive track while dodging stomach acid and eventually get on top of its head. The level featured an anatomical tour of the beast, complete with rib cage, beating heart even a dangling uvula. Once the player made it up to the brain, there was a hand-drawn animation of what the beast was thinking: eating SackBoy. Once the player got past the teeth and used the tongue to lob themselves on top of the monster's snout, the level was over."
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Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Apparently yes, you did miss something. It was a level design competition. A big part of the game is the fact that it allows massive and complex user created levels. They were given 24 hours to see what they could do.
Re: (Score:1)
LOLWUT (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Not mind blowing, but not bad (Score:1)
Looks... frustrating (Score:4, Insightful)
From the two videos I saw, seemed a lot of the time was people wrestling with the controls, trying to execute a jump or hold onto something. A LOT of the time. Gives the impression the controls are fiddly and inaccurate, if you assume that the people operating the characters in the videos are at least familiar with PS3 controls.
Re:Looks... frustrating (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed, it looked very pretty but from the videos executing a simple jump, particularly from a standing start, seemed rather difficult to pull off.
For a game that fits largely in the 'platform' genre that seems like a cardinal sin.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't see how you can get that from these videos. Some of the more fiddly bits seemed like they were related to the level design, and these were custom levels, not official levels. I have a hard time believing you could draw any (valid) conclusions whatsoever from a gameplay video that doesn't include a video of the player.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not much of a platformer myself (I only completed my first Mario game a couple of years ago when I found an old SNES in the holiday house we were staying in), but even I could see that the guy running around the level just wasn't very well co-ordinated or experienced. He ended up cheating just to show off the level. That game does look like good fun though, especially if level editors are going to be provided with it and there's the multiplayer element :) I was pretty underwhelmed at first there because
Then you fail to understand the game (Score:2)
From the two videos I saw, seemed a lot of the time was people wrestling with the controls, trying to execute a jump or hold onto something. A LOT of the time.
If elements of the level are too hard for you, make 'em a bit easier. Or slap a big 'ol danger label on them. The controls are only part of the game, a large element is that you can change anything...
Re: (Score:2)
I fully understand the game, when playing it it's a simple platformer. My gripe is that performing basic moves seemed difficult to the users. A poor interface can make even a very simple game frustrating.
Re: (Score:1)
Agreed.
One of the great things about Portal was that when you got the idea right, it worked, even if you are a klutz when it comes to the controls. If I had to absolutely hit the portal correctly, then it would have taken forever and been much less fun. Adding in a 'funnel' capability means that if you're close, then you make it. It also means that my 7 year old can play (well, the non-death levels anyway)
This should be added to LittleBigPlanet as an option I think. it doesn't need to be heavy handed, j
Re: (Score:2)
Don't be so hard. A lot of the problems I was seeing were level design problems, and as they only had 24 hours to work out the kinks I think it's pretty impressive.
Amazing what you can do in 24 hours (Score:2)