In the last profile, I ended up giving general advice on seeking out development jobs, here are additional suggestions for narrative designers:
- If you have the time or resources, I'd recommend attending the Game Narrative/Writer's Track in Austin GDC, TX in October (I
Some Planescape: Torment questions from Joe Hogle, an undergrad at the University of Pittsburgh, posting the reasons for some design choices.
(BTW, if you guys ever have questions you want to answer for research papers or just because you want to know, feel free to email me at CAvellone@obsidian.net, let me know when you need them by, and if it's okay to blog the answers.)
In many RPGs, including the Fallout games you
Some Old World Questions from Rocky Justice (thanks, Rocky):
1. What is your official title? I know in the credits it says you're a writer, but I was wondering if there was a more specific title for your job. Also, how'd you get in to your line of work? Did you study writing in college, or was it something you discovered later on?
I'm Creative Director here at the studio - I'm involved with the design department, giving advice on best practices, design methodology, and he
Because Twitter would make this too fragmented:
(Spoiler alert)
NCR sacks Navarro in the West, recovers a bunch of tech they don't understand, as history has proven.
They do, however, recognize the symbols (American flag, silo stencils, etc.) and recognize it might be tied to the same symbols and markings the NCR found at the Divide.
NCR hires a Courier to take the item there. They don't for a second think that anything bad will happen as a result,
Fallout New Vegas DLC contest this time was to suggest research projects for DLC3: Old World Blues, taking you to the technological graveyard of the Big Empty, one winner:
I chose the one from Blinzler below, because like Old World Blues, it draws upon the history of Fallout and in this case, Blinzler's entry reminded me of the Burrows (even though the Burrows never existed, one of the goals of Old World Blues was to dig into the history of how certain inventions and critters in the
Here are my ruthlessly subjective winners for the most honest act in Fallout: New Vegas that made your heart hurt.
Of the 200+ entries, here are the winners followed by a lot of honorable mentions.
Next contest for Old World Blues should be up on Twitter soon. It'll probably involve experiments. Or captions. Or something blue-sy.
Warning: Spoilers below.
Winner ==============
KnotworkOrange
Created my account just to answer. Though
We had a few winners with the Fallout T-shirt contest - the contest: do a one sentence Fallout movie pitch (in honor of the Fallout movie script being leaked).
Lot of submissions (and too much to do in a Twitter post). I finally decided to break it into 3 categories: Best Trailer Speak, One That Made Me Laugh, and the Most Honest. So without further ado...
(And forgive the formatting, this'll be the last time I experiment with size, color, or fonts).
First the
Couldn't fit all the entries on Twitter, so here's a selection of winners for the Fallout New Vegas perk contest.
Broke them into Most Useful/Interesting, Most Ennio Morricone-Inspired and Most Humorous. #FNV
Most Useful/Interesting: @ericsiry Six Million Cap Man, @Spartan3995 The New You!, @Spartan3995 Burden to Bare, @Soultaker696 Sole Survivor.
Most Thematic and Ennio Morricone-Inspired: @ericsiry Trick Shot, @gogukaizer Evil Eye, @amoebasoid A Few Caps Mor
Another question from Rafal Adamek:
Can people who are not a programmers can be a part of a game industry? I read on your blog about good schools to start with and everything. But what about different people? Let
With Dead Money coming out for the PC and PS3 this week, I got into a discussion about how I feel about its reception and some of the design decisions. In short, my feelings concern the context of the specific design elements. Some folks understand the "why" of the challenge elements even if they don't agree with them, which is fine, as long as they get why we did it the way we did - and that may not be apparent. So: If you play the adventure and want to dig deeper into the reasons behind the co
Quick question from Rafał Adamek:
I have a question: what types of characters do you prefer? Do you like to create a mass of different episodic persons who can gave you quest, have some background story but are not related to the main hero and don
Minor addition to the writing question list.
Also how is it like to write without having any idea how the character will sound?
When writing, most designers envision how the character sounds as they're writing - when the time comes for auditions, they provide a series of sample lines, a picture of the character in-game, breakdowns of the age, brief history, etc., and then the casting agency will run through auditions looking for someone who can deliver the lines as envisi
2 More:
How do you choose who writes each (major) character in a game, also who's allowed to do any writing?
Depends, sometimes it's just necessity (you have the most bandwidth, so you do X person, or you're already doing the main city where the character resides, so it's best if you write Y antagonist), other times we're able to purposely assign folks with skill sets to characters (which Josh did on Fallout New Vegas). For Fallout New Vegas, Josh broke down the companio
Something that seems to frequently come up when discussing the design of a game system is whether or not some aspect of that system adheres to reality. Or, more precisely, whether the outcomes of that system accurately simulate the results that the person making the argument expects, based on their particular interpretation of reality.
Generally, these arguments come from players, or from non-designers, or less experienced designers, and will take the form of, "But XXXX isn't realistic!" o
From a multi-part question on Twitter.
How do Project Directors and/or Lead Designers get selected?
To clarify the hierarchy at our studio, a Project Director isn't necessarily a designer, and at Obsidian, a Project Director is above all other disciplines except Feargus, who is all-powerful, even if he might debate that.
At the moment, we have four project directors - one from design (Josh Sawyer), another from design (me), one from programming (Rich Taylor),
Anyone who's curious about Fallout: New Vegas and Dungeon Siege III, we have three events lined up at Comic-Con if you want to check them out.
Thursday 7.22.10
1:00-2:00 Video Game Comics: The Next Big Thing
Some questions from forum goers/emailers: TheJokester
Do you have any recommendations on what schools would be good to go to for game development?
The Guildhall's pretty solid (a few of our designers on Fallout New Vegas were hired from there). They usually have strong portfolios based on classwork they've done, which they can usually use for quick submission in designer tests, too.
If you end up going to any gaming school, just make sure they put you in group
Questions from Davide Scalzo:
1) What do you think about the concept of emergent narrative?
1. I think the concept of emergent narrative is stronger than any enforced narrative. I think a blend can work well (and it's what I prefer whenever possible), but I think the stories players create on their own from interesting system mechanics and AI behavior has more weight and meaning than anything a designer tries to do. My favorite example is that no enforced narrative can r