My ToonBoom trial ended and I had to fork over $180 for the yearly subscription, plus I bought some FX assets that may or may not remain in the final game. That brings the total cost of the game up to $310.97. That's cheap for a game budget, sure, but it's not cheap for me.
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Blood Ship: Day 61
My ToonBoom trial ended and I had to fork over $180 for the yearly subscription, plus I bought some FX assets that may or may not remain in the final game. That brings the total cost of the game up to $310.97. That's cheap for a game budget, sure, but it's not cheap for me.
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
Blood Ship: Day 53
Despite my initial love for Spine, I haven't used it in weeks. Now that I've gone with more traditional animations, the predominantly tweened animations I did last month stick out like a sore thumb.
Games I'm currently playing on my MAME machine: the Gradius series, Raiden, and R-Type.
Wait. Not playing. Researching.
Yeah....
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Blood Ship: Day 46
About a week ago I broke the bomb ability. The problem was dumb and the solution was even dumber, but it's surprising I'm over a month in and that's one of the more serious issues I've had. I can only think of two or three other times I wanted to rip my hair out by the fistful. (These kinds of problems seemed to plague my last game attempt on a daily basis.)
As I've said in previous posts, I've been circling and circling around the imperfect stuff, improving instead of building new stuff. I think the time to branch out to new stuff is almost here. I'm thinking proper stages, new bosses, etc. I'd like to make a browser version, too, so people can try the randomly generated mode before downloading the complete desktop version.
(Sonic Mania isn't coming out today after all, but that's probably a good thing for the sake of productivity. My day job is unusually demanding this week.)
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Blood Ship: Day 39
Boob physics, anyone?
Looks like I'm using Toon Boom Harmony for my animations. I've tried most of the competing programs, and I resisted this one because I hate subscription models, but I fell in love with it minutes after beginning the trial. Super smooth, super intuitive (I haven't even looked at the instructions yet), and the subscription thing's not nearly as egregious as Adobe's subscription models.
Today's the first time I felt unmotivated to work on the game. I'm tired and I just want to play Slime Rancher, which is probably the biggest threat to my productivity since I started this whole thing. (I imagine next week's Sonic Mania will be the next big threat.) I managed to get some stuff done, but I'm probably going to bed at a somewhat decent hour tonight.
Today's the first time I felt unmotivated to work on the game. I'm tired and I just want to play Slime Rancher, which is probably the biggest threat to my productivity since I started this whole thing. (I imagine next week's Sonic Mania will be the next big threat.) I managed to get some stuff done, but I'm probably going to bed at a somewhat decent hour tonight.
Visually, there's nothing terribly new in the game other than some of the effects, but it feels a lot tighter than it did last week. I'm currently fixing the stuff that was handled sloppily during my push to get a working prototype as soon as possible.
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
Blood Ship: Day 32
Two problems this week: sometimes the wave generator doesn't shut off when the boss appears and, even rarer, the player's projectiles impact on something which doesn't seem to exist. I'm still in "ignore it and hope it fixes itself" denial, but that's kind of like just driving a car until the check engine light burns out.
I've been studying a lot of other shoot-'em-ups and paying attention to the little details which contribute to the way the game feels. I want to nail the feeling of what I've got before adding any more new stuff. I want to get the artwork a helluva lot closer to the goalpost, too (as you can see above, it ain't even close). The problem is I have the best ideas for new stuff when I make it a point not to add new stuff.
Here's my end-of-month budget report:
$18.99 Gamemaker (purchased during last year's Humble Bundle sale)
$14.99 Aseprite (already owned it, but haven't used it in earnest until now)
$0.99 A bullet-hell script (which may not make it to the final version)
$69.00 Spine (also may not make it to the final version)
$5.00 Some generic laser sounds (almost definitely won't make it to the final version)
$108.97. Not bad, I'd say.
I've been studying a lot of other shoot-'em-ups and paying attention to the little details which contribute to the way the game feels. I want to nail the feeling of what I've got before adding any more new stuff. I want to get the artwork a helluva lot closer to the goalpost, too (as you can see above, it ain't even close). The problem is I have the best ideas for new stuff when I make it a point not to add new stuff.
Here's my end-of-month budget report:
$18.99 Gamemaker (purchased during last year's Humble Bundle sale)
$14.99 Aseprite (already owned it, but haven't used it in earnest until now)
$0.99 A bullet-hell script (which may not make it to the final version)
$69.00 Spine (also may not make it to the final version)
$5.00 Some generic laser sounds (almost definitely won't make it to the final version)
$108.97. Not bad, I'd say.
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