Hollandazed: Thoughts, Ideas, and Miscellany — game development

FROM THE ARCHIVES: ARTY (by Tom Russell)

Mary Russell

Tags game design, game development

FROM THE ARCHIVES: ARTY (by Tom Russell)

It's January of 2012, and I've just found a publisher for what would be my first published game, Blood on the Alma. The publisher is very impressed with the design. He's excited; I'm excited; Mary's excited; everyone's excited, except perhaps our cats, who react with typical indifference. There's one hitch, though: the game has too many counters. Including all the variant scenario counters and status markers, there's 210 of them, and to fit in the magazine, I need to get it down to 120. Many of these are step counters - the way the game works is that each unit...


FROM THE ARCHIVES: ON THE SMALLNESS OF TABLES (by Tom Russell)

Mary Russell

Comments 1 Tags game design, game development

FROM THE ARCHIVES: ON THE SMALLNESS OF TABLES (by Tom Russell)

Many of the games we publish have a "small footprint". Partially this is because my own designs tend toward being compact, the result of working habits I developed over the course of a dozen-or-so games designed for magazines and ziplocks. I try to get as much game as possible out of as few components as possible. The venerable Bruce Geryk once said of The Grunwald Swords that it "punches above its weight", and that's a rather nice bit that I'm eager to use in our advertising copy. So for a long time, I've designed reasonably compact games, though of late...


FROM THE ARCHIVES: BUT WHAT ABOUT THE FIRST TIME? PART 2 (by Tom Russell)

Mary Russell

Comments 1 Tags game design, game development, gameplay

FROM THE ARCHIVES: BUT WHAT ABOUT THE FIRST TIME? PART 2 (by Tom Russell)

So last time I wrote about how a bad first impression with a game can make folks unlikely to try it a second time. There might be great and hidden depths that reveal themselves after x number of plays, but many folks aren't going to ever get to x. Or, as John Brieger put it, "you have a problem if it requires weeks of playing constantly for players to achieve the level of knowledge to make the game balanced." The thing is, I don't know if that really is a problem. I mean, yes, it is a problem, in the...


FROM THE ARCHIVES: BUT WHAT ABOUT THE FIRST TIME? PART 1 (by Tom Russell)

Mary Russell

Tags game design, game development, gameplay

FROM THE ARCHIVES: BUT WHAT ABOUT THE FIRST TIME? PART 1 (by Tom Russell)

Years and years ago, I was talking with a fellow - we'll call him Henry - who had seen a film that Mary and I had directed and was, shall we say, underwhelmed. Which was fine, as far as that goes; not every film is for everybody, and that goes double for the weird sorts of comedies we were making. But Henry and I had a rather cordial and pleasant conversation about the film and some of the choices Mary and I had made with it, which he found too subtle for his tastes. I said something to the effect...


FROM THE ARCHIVES: DOUBTS (by Tom Russell)

Mary Russell

Tags game design, game development

FROM THE ARCHIVES: DOUBTS (by Tom Russell)

When my first few games were published, I wasn't very sure of myself, my abilities, or my judgment. I was constantly afraid that a game would come out and gamers would immediately discover some glaring and obvious hole in the rules that had somehow gotten overlooked. Then I'd be the guy who had designed a broken game. But you do enough of these things and you'll start to build up your confidence. After six years of working in the games industry, I have worked on nearly fifty games in some capacity or another, mostly as a designer or as a...