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Shadowrun Shadowrun Returns Pre-Release Thread

sea

inXile Entertainment
Developer
Joined
May 3, 2011
Messages
5,698
shadowrun.jpg


It's there... taunting me... mocking me...
 

Trash

Pointing and laughing.
Joined
Dec 12, 2002
Messages
29,683
Location
About 8 meters beneath sea level.
Seems Matrix runs are being a bitch to implement in the editor. Also looking forward to someone actually doing an arcology setting. Loved that sourcebook with the roach overrun one. Also going to stop looking at the LP vids. Guy plays like a tard and it's already quite clear that the gameplay seems up to par. Shit that on release day I'm stuck with a late shift.
 

likaq

Arcane
Joined
Dec 28, 2009
Messages
1,198
http://www.vg247.com/2013/07/16/sha...racters-can-still-survive-dangerous-campaign/

Speaking with PlayNation, Gitelman was asked if combat-weak characters could still survive the game’s plot.

He replied, “Yes. You’ll be able to survive. What you’ll do is, that on several missions you will have in NPCs come with you and most of our in NPCs are pretty combat oriented. You’ll also be able to hire runners to go with you to supplement your own abilities, but it’s a tactical combat RPG so I wouldn’t go to weak on that just now – at least in *this* campaign. It’s a dangerous campaign.

“You know what I’m hoping, and Jordan feels the same way, with the editor – we would love people to create stories where it doesn’t even need combat, you know. There’s all sorts of things you can do with it.

Decision to go towards combat-heavy game is big fucking decline.
I want fallout-like gameplay not fallout tactics like.

:(
 

Kem0sabe

Arcane
Joined
Mar 7, 2011
Messages
13,093
Location
Azores Islands
http://www.vg247.com/2013/07/16/sha...racters-can-still-survive-dangerous-campaign/

Speaking with PlayNation, Gitelman was asked if combat-weak characters could still survive the game’s plot.

He replied, “Yes. You’ll be able to survive. What you’ll do is, that on several missions you will have in NPCs come with you and most of our in NPCs are pretty combat oriented. You’ll also be able to hire runners to go with you to supplement your own abilities, but it’s a tactical combat RPG so I wouldn’t go to weak on that just now – at least in *this* campaign. It’s a dangerous campaign.

“You know what I’m hoping, and Jordan feels the same way, with the editor – we would love people to create stories where it doesn’t even need combat, you know. There’s all sorts of things you can do with it.

Decision to go towards combat-heavy game is big fucking decline.
I want fallout-like gameplay not fallout tactics like.

:(

I wouldn't expect quality C&C from this, unless they hired some new writers.

crimson_steam_pirates_2.gif

But if the combat is interesting and the encounters varied and well designed, then it doesn't need to have good C&C.
 

crawlkill

Kill all boxed game owners. Kill! Kill!
Joined
May 9, 2012
Messages
674
can we take a moment to appreciate that this thread has degenerated into nerds angrily comparing how much they know about corporate publishing politics
If we're going to be funding games, we need to know this stuff. Especially if you care about DRM free, who's getting the profits, potential for sequels and/or expansions.


well, that's fair. but the hostility seems unwarranted. guess that's our people comparing knowings for you, though.

I wouldn't expect quality C&C from this, unless they hired some new writers.

butbut that's what it's all about ;; inevitably the tactical RPG part of the game will end up easy to smash. the endurance in these titles, at least for me, comes of watching the game noticing my choices in different ways (or even just in the same goody twoshoes way every time). I know that world reactivity isn't something they've much promised, butbutbut I still waunt it. I'm still playing a Charisma-and-branes-only character, even if the game doesn't much support it. I WILL PRETEND I AM PLAYING FALLOUT.

also the phrasing of that is weird. "on several missions you will have in NPCs come with you?" forgetting the potatoe English (am I doing it right Codex), what's he mean by 'several' missions? I'd thought runs were all done with a hired team?

at any rate I'm sure we'll get obsessive-compulsive detail level C+C games from the editor. what was that one NWN2 fan module I've heard about? it has an entire TVTropes page. at one point you can get pregnant, I think. I've heard that one is autisically alert to your choices.

The article said:
To use more of the character skills that we allow, than we did ourselves in our first campaign.
aaah the flag it is red why was this man allowed to speak to the press
 

Roguey

Codex Staff
Staff Member
Sawyerite
Joined
May 29, 2010
Messages
35,815
Decision to go towards combat-heavy game is big fucking decline.
I want fallout-like gameplay not fallout tactics like.

:(
They had ~15 months and ~1.2 million to make a game from scratch. :M
 

Grunker

RPG Codex Ghost
Patron
Joined
Oct 19, 2009
Messages
27,416
Location
Copenhagen
http://www.vg247.com/2013/07/16/sha...racters-can-still-survive-dangerous-campaign/

Speaking with PlayNation, Gitelman was asked if combat-weak characters could still survive the game’s plot.

He replied, “Yes. You’ll be able to survive. What you’ll do is, that on several missions you will have in NPCs come with you and most of our in NPCs are pretty combat oriented. You’ll also be able to hire runners to go with you to supplement your own abilities, but it’s a tactical combat RPG so I wouldn’t go to weak on that just now – at least in *this* campaign. It’s a dangerous campaign.

“You know what I’m hoping, and Jordan feels the same way, with the editor – we would love people to create stories where it doesn’t even need combat, you know. There’s all sorts of things you can do with it.

Decision to go towards combat-heavy game is big fucking decline.
I want fallout-like gameplay not fallout tactics like.

:(

There's criticizing bad decisions and there's just being unrealistic. Fallout made for 1.2 million dollars in 15 months is impossible.
 

Grunker

RPG Codex Ghost
Patron
Joined
Oct 19, 2009
Messages
27,416
Location
Copenhagen
So are the Codex staff getting advanced review copies by any chance :roll:

Hah, we'll get 1 review copy at most, possibly time-locked, and the Codex reviewer is not a member of staff.

Zed is lying though. My chair is greased with Doritos dust courtesy of Harebrained!
 
Self-Ejected

Ulminati

Kamelåså!
Patron
Joined
Jun 18, 2010
Messages
20,317
Location
DiNMRK
And I'm enjoying a refreshing bottle of mountain jew with a custom Stuffer Shack™®© logo on the label.
 

SwiftCrack

Arcane
Joined
Oct 3, 2012
Messages
1,836
Oh well, guess I'll jump in on the 25th without checking reviews then. I doubt IGNorant, Rock Paper Misogyny and Derpstructoid will review the game as I see it (an editor that comes with one campaign on release). Maybe PC Gamer and Giant Bomb will pump out a good one though.
 

Flacracker

Educated
Joined
Nov 6, 2011
Messages
77
Has this been leaked yet? I want to play a "demo" before I buy this awesome shit who-knows-I-need-to-play-it-first game.
 

likaq

Arcane
Joined
Dec 28, 2009
Messages
1,198
http://www.vg247.com/2013/07/16/sha...racters-can-still-survive-dangerous-campaign/

Speaking with PlayNation, Gitelman was asked if combat-weak characters could still survive the game’s plot.

He replied, “Yes. You’ll be able to survive. What you’ll do is, that on several missions you will have in NPCs come with you and most of our in NPCs are pretty combat oriented. You’ll also be able to hire runners to go with you to supplement your own abilities, but it’s a tactical combat RPG so I wouldn’t go to weak on that just now – at least in *this* campaign. It’s a dangerous campaign.

“You know what I’m hoping, and Jordan feels the same way, with the editor – we would love people to create stories where it doesn’t even need combat, you know. There’s all sorts of things you can do with it.

Decision to go towards combat-heavy game is big fucking decline.
I want fallout-like gameplay not fallout tactics like.

:(

There's criticizing bad decisions and there's just being unrealistic. Fallout made for 1.2 million dollars in 15 months is impossible.

Fair enough.
 

Infinitron

I post news
Staff Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
97,478
Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
As I suspected, switching to isometric graphics was the main source of problems in SRR's development: http://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2013-07-16-shadowrun-returns-dev-will-return-to-kickstarter

Shadowrun dev prepping return to Kickstarter

By Brendan Sinclair
Harebrained Schemes' Mitch Gitelman on what went right, what went wrong when fans could see "how the sausage gets made"

When the Kickstarter wave formed, Shadowrun Returns was on the crest, right alongside Wasteland 2 and Double Fine Adventure as new projects from veteran developers that far outstripped their initial funding goals. However, it will also be the highest profile title yet from that generation of projects to see release, as backers have already been sent Steam unlock keys and a July 25 launch has been nailed down. With the game all but released, GamesIndustry International spoke with executive producer Mitch Gitelman to discuss what insights and learnings he has to share as the first of 2012's big-name Kickstarters to cross the finish line.

While Gitelman struggled to come up with any regrets about the way Harebrained Schemes handled the Kickstarter and subsequent development of the game, he readily admitted that if he had it all to do over again, there would be some changes.

"We didn't know what we were doing, exactly," Gitleman explained of the Kickstarter project. "There were no lectures about it at GDC or anything. So yes, I would do it differently. We didn't plan out stretch goals the way this generation of Kickstarters does. We added them organically, and we didn't have some master plan on how to roll them out."

Instead, Harebrained developers combed the Internet looking for forum chatter from Shadowrun fans and potential backers, just to see what they were discussing amongst themselves. The team then made its decisions on stretch goals based largely on what seemed to be exciting the backers, trying to capitalize on that enthusiasm so long as it didn't undermine the game.


The decision to switch to an isometric point-of-view had cascading effects on Shadowrun's development.

"It was a very organic, and very, for lack of a better word, 'customer-oriented' approach, which I'm kind of proud of," Gitelman said. "But from a planning point of view, the executive in me says something different. And the designer in me says something different."

While Gitelman says he has no problem telling his inner executive to go sit in a corner, he is not so disciplined when it comes to design issues. As an example, he brought up the decision to go from a top-down 2D game to a 2D-3D hybrid with an isometric viewpoint as one with cascading consequences for development.

"That one decision right there added amazing complexity and cost to the development, that one decision more than any other," Gitelman said. Beyond the greater demands on the art team, the user interface was similarly complicated by the switch, impacting things like line-of-sight calculations.

Between the change in perspective and the assortment of stretch goals tacked on when the game more than quadrupled its initial $400,000 asking price, Gitelman said the scope increased to the point where the game would be unable to meet its original January 2013 release date. Gitelman wasn't too broken up about that, noting, "A game's only late until it ships, and a good game is a good game forever, hopefully."

While Shadowrun Returns isn't the only Kickstarter game to miss its originally planned release date, Gitelman doesn't believe these crowdfunded projects are running into operational difficulties at a rate any different from normal game development.

"It's one thing to make a game for a publisher where it's very secret until you finally announce it X amount of weeks or months before ship when you want to get the rolling thunder of marketing going," Gitelman said. "It's another thing to make a game in a fishbowl where everybody can see everything you're doing. And a lot of what I see on other Kickstarters are production difficulties or issues that happen on almost every game, except nobody knows it because it's not so much in the public eye. I think there's an element where you don't really want to know how the sausage is made; you just want to know it tastes good."

Some crowdfunded projects have taken that level of transparency up a notch, and invited backers into the development process itself in a variety of ways. Gitelman said the Shadowrun Returns team made a conscious effort not to have backers giving direct input in the game, a decision that he was surprised didn't get much negative feedback.

"I expected that, but it really hasn't happened that way on Shadowrun Returns," Gitelman said. "Truthfully, our backers have been great. ... I think what's happened is we set the tone pretty early in our Kickstarter. It was a fairly conscious decision on my part. We'll listen to feedback and then we'll make intelligent decisions, but we don't solicit it."

Instead, Gitelman pointed backers to a Shadowrun fansite and told them to have their debates there so the developers would monitor the discussions and incorporate some good ideas.

"We haven't engaged the fans directly because we're not about to have a debate or an argument with our supporters," Gitelman said. "Let them debate each other and then we'll just make intelligent decisions on things they can't possibly know, production difficulties, costs, manpower, all that kind of stuff."

With one Kickstarted project nearly in the can, Gitelman confirmed Harebrained Schemes is prepping to take a second shot at crowdfunded game development. He clearly enjoyed his first go-around on Kickstarter, and hopes to see it become a sustainable platform for game development, even if he can already identify some growing pains.

As Gitelman explained, "The real question for me is, 'Is Kickstarter a viable place where you can come with a new IP or an out-there idea and find an audience for that?' What I'm looking at with Kickstarter is whether we can really innovate in this space. Can we use that as a bully pulpit, and to cut through the noise enough to find an audience to support it? But now that Kickstarter is so big, it's almost like the iOS marketplace, so you have to market your Kickstarter and now you have to do even more work to get noticed. It's an evolving animal, and I hope it works out because I really like the idea of allowing gamers to voice their support in a way that allows indies to follow their passion."
 

Branm

Learned
Joined
Apr 27, 2013
Messages
472
Location
Ottawa
Pretty good interview. Will be interesting to see how their 2nd kickstarter does. If Shadowrun's good ill most likely support it if the pitch up my alley.
 

mindx2

Codex Roaming East Coast Reporter
Patron
Joined
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Messages
4,429
Location
Perusing his PC Museum shelves.
Codex 2012 PC RPG Website of the Year, 2015 Codex 2016 - The Age of Grimoire RPG Wokedex Serpent in the Staglands Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 BattleTech Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
At least it looks like they are going to put their product out there for all to judge before going back to the Kickstarter well. We'll see how "good" the game is before giving away pledging more of our hard earned monies.
 

SuicideBunny

(ノ ゜Д゜)ノ ︵ ┻━┻
Joined
May 1, 2007
Messages
8,943
Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Torment: Tides of Numenera
still no keys : ( (yes, i am going to post every day).
 

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