Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
PC Games (Games) Real Time Strategy (Games) Role Playing (Games) Entertainment Games

Leonard Boyarsky On 'Fallout's Spiritual Successor' 25

An anonymous reader submits "Duck and Cover have interviewed Troika's Leonard Boyarsky about their currently unsigned post-apocalyptic game. He describes it as the 'spiritual successor to Fallout', which sounds good to me."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Leonard Boyarsky On 'Fallout's Spiritual Successor'

Comments Filter:
  • engine recycle (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    This is a quotation pulled from the first question:

    This game needs roughly a two year development cycle, as we're building the engine along with the game. Once we finish the engine we could turn around another rpg in about 18 months. Since we're building everything you'd expect from a high end 3d engine into it (displacement mapping, bump mapping, specular mapping, real time shadows and lighting effects, etc) we'll be able to utilize this engine for several projects at least.

    Is it at all disconcerting t
    • Re:engine recycle (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Morphine007 ( 207082 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @01:53PM (#10097133)
      They aren't talking about sequels. They're talking about building a (hopefully) robust game engine, which, will allow them to build a game on top of. The game engine has little to do with the content of the game. If it's a flexible engine, which most are, the "sequel" that you talk of would only be related to the original in that they'd be of the same genre, ie. FPS, RTS, MMORPG, etc...
      • If it's a flexible engine, which most are, the "sequel" that you talk of would only be related to the original in that they'd be of the same genre, ie. FPS, RTS, MMORPG, etc...

        And if it's really flexible, it won't even have to be of the same genre. Reusing engines is a great idea that has served developers countless times in the past.

        Rob
    • The model of not reusing is what companies which can buy a license for a engine are doing already.

      You can see examples of what "small, dedicated team who don't have to homogenize their work" on most of the games avalaible today, and sadly most are nothing to call home about.

      Surely the makers of a engine know how to make the most of it too, which is a plus.

      Been said that, you have a good point, and I hope that Troika doesn't fall in the deadlines trap and skip the content just to get the engine ready f

    • Re:engine recycle (Score:2, Flamebait)

      by Lars T. ( 470328 )
      So you want the programmers to hack together a one-project-only engine and try their hands on the content instead of having the programmers work on a universal engine and hire somebody else to concentrate on the content, later implementing it with the engine as a tool?
    • It seems like it would be cheaper for them to just purchase an existing engine and focus solely on the content. Not only would they not have to waste an extra 6 months, but RPGs almost always look dated. They'd probably have a more impressive product if they let someone like id or Epic provide something that's consistently up to date instead of trying to do it in house while simultaneously developing a game as well, especially given their limited staff.

      While someone else's engine would create some limita
    • Re:engine recycle (Score:2, Insightful)

      by neelm ( 691182 )
      You don't know your game history then, I can tell. Sierra, in it's high days of the Kings Quest / Police Quest / Larry / etc games did the same approach. I don't think anyone is saying all those classic games were crap because they had the forsight to wrote code in an intelligent manner?

      Or think about it another way. I have 5 game ideas; I can either a) write the first game in such a way that it takes 3 years to do, but 1.5 years for each game after, or b) I can spend 3 years on each game, writing code
  • My wish list (Score:5, Interesting)

    by SmallFurryCreature ( 593017 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @01:52PM (#10097131) Journal
    First the obvious stuff
    • A strong story with plenty of side quests but wich intertwine with the main quest and wich affect each other.
    • Let me be a force of good a force of evil (for the 12yr olds who call their mommy sir). I loved the "what happened" at the end of fallout. But give me real freedom. Make it possible to be really really good but make it cost you. Same with evil. So that most people will play in the middle. None of this, give 100 credits out of your one million stash and become a saint. Make good really good, evil really evil and plenty of middle ground for the less idealistic player. I hate games that just make me choose between "sorta nice" and "pointlessly evil".
    • No icewind dale. I want to meet intresting characters. Not roll up an army.
    • The past troika games suffered from HUGE empty areas. TOOE especially was bad in the opening. 2 screens full of empty non-enterable barn does not say "ooh nice" it says "what is this an rpg or image scroller?" Keep it tight. I never seen the need for seperate weapons and armour dealers. If there is no story need for seperate stores create a market like plaza. Don't make me walk when there is no story need.
    As for the combat if they are going real time make it as complex as possible with plenty of options you can turn off for the lesser players.

    I would love to see some real tactically options used. Like machine guns being crap at hitting but excellent for supression fire. The thing I hate most about turnbased games is that things like supression fire and encirclement don't really have an effect like they would in realtime.

    BUT most important since this will be a troika game. Get a good publisher that is not afraid to make a rated game or don't make the game rated in the first place. None of this TOEE stuff with half the game ripped out seconds before release.

    And please please test this time eh. Past games have been to put it mildly a bit buggy. People are getting fed up with this.

    Will I get the game I want? Doubt it. Planescape torment was extremely close to perfect (the graphics could have high-res) and didn't sell. Fallout was almost there. Sadly it been an awfully long time since then and there just doesn't seem to be any demand for games like this.

    • machine guns being crap at hitting but excellent for supression fire

      In reality, they're good at hitting too. You can't really suppress someone unless you present a serious threat of anyone poking his head up being immediately drilled. In some conflicts, machine guns have scored 100s of times more kills than rifles (even if the accuracy ratio per each shot was less, the number of bullets more than makes up for it)

      The thing I hate most about turnbased games is that things like supression fire and encirc
  • by vjmurphy ( 190266 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @03:03PM (#10097631) Homepage
    "He describes it as the 'spiritual successor to Fallout', which sounds good to me."

    Yeah, just like UFO: Aftermath was a spiritual successor to the UFO games. Usually, that means that the game will really suck and we'll still be waiting for a real successor to the game in question.

    Have there ever been any "spiritual successors" to any good game that have been worthy?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 28, 2004 @03:08PM (#10097662)
      No, the reference is directly to Fallout. Fallout's manual said the game was 'the spiritual successor to Wasteland'. Hence this quote will get people who know about Fallout excited, as it's a direct reference to that, kind of 'the next generation'.
  • by BlightThePower ( 663950 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @04:51PM (#10098354)
    I found this quote rather chilling: There's been a lot of debate since I said that we were considering real time with pause over turn based so that we could get this game made. The fact of the matter is that we're not self funded, we rely solely on publishers to fund our projects. Most publishers have flat out told us that they will not be funding any turn based games, and are not even interested in discussing them. If we can't sell a Troika post apocalyptic RPG to a publisher, it will never get made, it's as simple as that. No more turn-based games?! Perhaps an exaggeration but it depresses me that the market is so raidly sinking. I'm a bit hazy on the specific game(s) but I'm sure I've seen hybrids that offered the player the choice. That would seem to be the equitable solution. Perhaps the coding/game balance overheads are too great.
    • by Mr. Teatime ( 809101 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:01PM (#10098421) Homepage
      Hi, I was the person who interviewed Leonard and my strong impression is that they WANT to do a turn based game, it's the publishers who don't want to take the risk of a) an unusual setting combined with b) a 'niche' (their view) combat system (turn based). There has to be demand for the system, and as Leonard says, they got a few publisher calls based on the media and community reaction to the screenshots a few months ago. So if we make enough noise about turn based games, there's still a chance.
      • Yes. I have the nasty feeling that if they had had the Fallout 3 license then it might have been possible from the position that the 'brand recognition' outside the hardcore for the title would have been based largely on Fallout Tactics.
      • If you know someone at Trokia, can you mention that looting isn't working in Temple of Elemental Evil; theres something funny going on with SP2 or DirectX9.0c possibly (although a roll-back of either or both doesn't necessarily fix it; problem is the bug is intermitent as well). Technical support are claiming its a "gameplay" issue and outwith their balliwick, leaving fans and players feeling rather frustrated. The bug makes the game unplayable and its causing severe consternation in some quarters of the t
    • I believe there is still a good market for turnbased games.
      One good example is the Silent Storm game.

      a dash of WW2, add a little scifi/fantasy and you've got a good gaminguniverse :)
      • Now that is an idea. I would like to see what Troika could do with the Silent Storm engine.

        They talk in the article about how the combat from ToEE with the depth of Arcanum would make a really great game and I agree. Silent Storm combat with the RPG depth of Fallout would be a lot better.
    • I don't think developers are forced to choose, turn-based vs real-time. There is a spectrum of time control:
      Traditional turn based (pause during every turn) - Final Fantasy, UFO
      Turn-based with user defined pauses - KOTOR, Baldur's Gate
      Turn Based with no pause - Everquest, most MMORPGs
      Real time w/ speed control - Most RTSs
      Real Time - FPSs, Flight/Space Sims
      I think only the first one is becoming objectionable for publishers trying to cater to the MTV generation. I do love my Civilization and Empire Deluxe
      • It's ironic because a good turn based system can have much better pacing of gameplay than the other systems. As long as the player learns how to play the game fluently and AI/Other players don't take too long.
      • Traditional turn based (pause during every turn) - Final Fantasy, UFO

        That category can be futher split into two sub-types: pause for each combatant's turn, or only for player-controlled units. Games in the former category, such as the original Fallout, can be absolutely maddening. You can never dare get into a fight on one of Fallout's densely-populated city maps, because then each of the 30+ random pedestrians onscren becomes a combatant who takes a turn each (painfully slow) round.

        Towards the conclus
    • What I find disappointing is that they take it 100% for granted that they will have to depend on some marketing-wonk-run publishing house to sell their game. This is the third millennium - reputable development shops oughta be able to sell computer games directly to the consumer, without kowtowing to the bottom line.

      • reputable development shops oughta be able to sell computer games directly to the consumer, without kowtowing to the bottom line.

        Even selling directly to the consumer, they still need money to get the game made.
  • Here. [halfbakery.com]

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

Working...