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Broken Roads - turn-based Australian post-apocalyptic RPG with "unique morality system" - coming April 10th

Trithne

Erudite
Joined
Dec 3, 2008
Messages
1,191
Went to their sites to try and see how many writers they already have (if your writing "team" for your indie rpg needs expanding, you're doing it wrong anyway) and all I found was a whole lot of nothing, and typos.

I continue to maintain that nothing good has ever come out of Melbourne.
 

Trithne

Erudite
Joined
Dec 3, 2008
Messages
1,191
Oh. They're setting it in Western Australia.

I can't wait to see how much they fuck it up.

Pretty sure Melbournites think it's already a wasteland anyway.
 
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Tyranicon

A Memory of Eternity
Developer
Joined
Oct 7, 2019
Messages
5,861
>Drop Bear Bytes is looking for a Writer and Narrative Designer with 3-5 years experience, who has shipped 1 or more titles

This job sounds like it pays less than minimum wage.

I may be biased, but this is why modern RPG writing sucks.
 

cyborgboy95

News Cyborg
Joined
Aug 24, 2019
Messages
2,735
Mishti 'Dreamer' Lewin is one of the scouts at Bally Bally Hall — a natural negotiator. Dreamer has been given inventory duty when you meet her; she'll be along for your first escort job as a Hired Gun.

ICrtRZ9.jpg
 

cyborgboy95

News Cyborg
Joined
Aug 24, 2019
Messages
2,735
https://www.screenhub.com.au/news-a...-cultural-expertise-to-drop-bear-bytes-262824

Bringing Indigenous cultural expertise to videogame development
Drop Bear Bytes recently hired Indiginerd's Cienan Muir as a narrative consultant. The team spoke to us about the role of Indigenous perspectives in their upcoming game, Broken Roads'
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What does it mean to tell an Australian story? It’s a question that weighs heavily in the minds of the Drop Bear Bytes team. Based in Torquay, Victoria, and led by Studio founder Craig Ritchie, the studio’s debut title Broken Roads is due out this year, a grim narrative adventure that looks part Mad Max, part Fallout, and offers a new perspective on Australia, post-apocalypse.

In Broken Roads the players are tasked with travelling, surviving, forming communities and making moral choices in their fight for survival. The game is set to blend classic turn-based tactical combat with a rich narrative to explore the complex ethical questions that inevitably arise when you’re fighting for your life.

Leanne Taylor-Giles, the game’s narrative lead, describes Broken Roads’ distinctly Australian setting as a rarity in commercial games; she calls the game ‘a celebration of our unique culture, that we hope will give people more insight into what it really means to be an Australian.’

It’s a rich creative goal – and one that requires real care to do right. Despite their love of genre, Drop Bear Bytes are focussed on making a game that reflects the complex reality of Australia, without relying on stereotypes. Representing life in this country is more than just vegemite and prawns on the barbie – this land is home to the world’s oldest living culture. Aboriginal peoples are the world’s first creative technologists, whose expertise is spread across hundreds of Indigenous nations.

To this end, Drop Bear Bytes hired Indiginerd founder Cienan Muir, a Yorta Yorta and Ngarrindjeri writer, events producer, cosplayer and lover of pop culture, who ran the country’s first IndigiCon in 2019. Now, he’s working with Taylor-Giles to provide both an expert perspective on the narrative treatment of Aboriginal characters and Countries, as well as giving creative input of his own. Muir describes the game as ‘a moral and ethical look at a world conquered by the apocalypse’ that will actively resist stereotypes in its characterisation of Indigenous cultures.

I spoke to the team about Broken Roads’ approach to telling a multifaceted Australian story. This interview has been edited for clarity.
Craig: I first met Cienan, very briefly, after a panel discussion about Indigenous representation in games at PAX 2019. I wanted someone close to the space who could help out with authentic, respectful representation. Drop Bear Bytes had already been fortunate enough to receive the support and guidance of Anthony Hume from the Narana Aboriginal Cultural Centre, but having someone engaged within the team in an ongoing capacity as Cienan is now was much needed.
Cienan: After fully understanding the game and the unique nature of it, I knew it was something I wanted to be a part of. It was also that I saw the team’s desire to do things right, which gave me a good understanding of just how I could make an impact and how my voice would be heard within this space.

Game development roles can look really different from project to project, especially in small teams. What do the narrative roles on Broken Roads look like?

Leanne: Because we are a small team, designing the narrative means touching storytelling in every aspect of development. We work closely with the art department, our sound effects designer and composer, and our level designer to make sure each place, person, and prop does what we need it to do, and that we’re getting story and world ideas from as many people as possible.

Cienan: As an Aboriginal, it is tough to watch a film or play a game where Indigenous characters, stories and representation aren’t done in the best way. Instead, stereotypes, tropes and racist myths are often relied on in film.

I’ve always been a huge advocate for telling our stories respectfully, and ensuring that we are involved in the process when there are Indigenous stories being told.
Cienan Muir

My role within the team is providing that critical eye where Indigenous Countries and characters are concerned. It also gives me a chance to get creative and let my own stories have some influence.

Cienan, you've been in the games space for a while, but this is your first game development role. What prompted the choice to move into game development?

Cienan: There’s amazing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people doing amazing stuff in the game world, whether in development or narrative. But there are few pathways and little opportunities for our people from a STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, Mathematics) perspective, including for those wishing to work for games companies.

I’ve always been a huge advocate for telling our stories respectfully, and ensuring that we are involved in the process when there are Indigenous stories being told. I thought this was a great opportunity to dip my feet into the world of narrative within the gaming world. A large influence for this has been examples of Indigenous people being involved in game narrative from other parts of the world, such as the game Never Alone (Kisima Inŋitchuŋa), [a narrative game that was developed through a partnership between the Cook Inlet Tribal Council in Canada, and E-Line Media].

I hope to see many other Indigenous people being offered opportunities in the gaming industry, but equally as important, a strengthening of STEAM educational platforms for our communities.
Indigenous artists are creating some of the best film, literature and TV, but they seem to be less common in this games space, despite Victoria's thriving games scene. What do you think can be done to make game dev more welcoming and appealing to Indigenous artists?

Cienan: I think it starts from high school. There’s a crucial need for STEAM-focused pathways, and Indigenous young people must equally be supported to pursue those goals. Game companies must understand the impact of creating a supportive and nurturing environment. In understanding that you have reach and impact as a company, you should also understand that you have the responsibility and privilege to be able to offer unique spaces for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

What's unique about games as a storytelling method? Are there unique possibilities that games can offer Indigenous creatives, and Indigenous stories?

Cienan: I think games have more of an impact on society as you are actively in control of an avatar, which can reflect on yourself, when you encounter moral choices and ethical questions.

As comic books had, and continue to have, an impact on us as a society, I think games are capable of reflecting ourselves in relation to the world around us.

Leanne: The power of video games lies in experiential learning... this approach is so effective, especially when it comes to moral or social issues. When done well, it has an immense capacity to transform the player’s worldview, encouraging new or different behaviours, and opening new pathways to places the player may never even have dreamed of.
Craig: There’s nothing quite like it in terms of providing the freedom to go through a story in multiple ways, with branching paths, and even multiple endings that react to player choices. As for unique possibilities for Indigenous creatives, well, I’m keen to see where Cienan takes us!
 
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Trithne

Erudite
Joined
Dec 3, 2008
Messages
1,191
So is this another sjw garbage or actual ethnic flavour?
Who even knows anymore, name sounds Celtic. What'll that do for an Aussie game.
Nah, name checks out. Dunno if she's going to be an expert on the specific type of local that relates to whichever part of the country they're setting the game though.

Not that it matters anyway, the game is clearly pozzed from the get go.
 

fantadomat

Arcane
Edgy Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
37,083
Location
Bulgaria
So is this another sjw garbage or actual ethnic flavour?
Who even knows anymore, name sounds Celtic. What'll that do for an Aussie game.
Nah, name checks out. Dunno if she's going to be an expert on the specific type of local that relates to whichever part of the country they're setting the game though.

Not that it matters anyway, the game is clearly pozzed from the get go.
:deathclaw:
Why hire some useless whitoid cunt instead of just sending one of their writers to live there for a week and talk with the locals about their ethnic customs and culture?
 

Trithne

Erudite
Joined
Dec 3, 2008
Messages
1,191
So is this another sjw garbage or actual ethnic flavour?
Who even knows anymore, name sounds Celtic. What'll that do for an Aussie game.
Nah, name checks out. Dunno if she's going to be an expert on the specific type of local that relates to whichever part of the country they're setting the game though.

Not that it matters anyway, the game is clearly pozzed from the get go.
:deathclaw:
Why hire some useless whitoid cunt instead of just sending one of their writers to live there for a week and talk with the locals about their ethnic customs and culture?

Mostly because most of those customs and culture were wiped out in the seventies anyway. The culture at this point consists of paint fumes, child abuse and sleeping in the middle of the street.

I would pay good money to see a Melbournite sent to somewhere like Meekatharra for a week though.
 

fantadomat

Arcane
Edgy Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
37,083
Location
Bulgaria
So is this another sjw garbage or actual ethnic flavour?
Who even knows anymore, name sounds Celtic. What'll that do for an Aussie game.
Nah, name checks out. Dunno if she's going to be an expert on the specific type of local that relates to whichever part of the country they're setting the game though.

Not that it matters anyway, the game is clearly pozzed from the get go.
:deathclaw:
Why hire some useless whitoid cunt instead of just sending one of their writers to live there for a week and talk with the locals about their ethnic customs and culture?

Mostly because most of those customs and culture were wiped out in the seventies anyway. The culture at this point consists of paint fumes, child abuse and sleeping in the middle of the street.

I would pay good money to see a Melbournite sent to somewhere like Meekatharra for a week though.
Well they still have tribal type of society and shamans. Also not every indian reservation is filled with useless drugies.....i think.
 

fantadomat

Arcane
Edgy Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
37,083
Location
Bulgaria
In the sense that after the White Australia policy and associated stuff, the locals lost most of their traditional names and are mostly stuck with whitey names now, with a bit of a tendency towards Celtic sounding ones.
Wait,are we talking about abos or american indians? If abo that is retarded,they didn't have any culture anyway lol. Why put a bunch of hovel stonage apes in the game? Tho the maori are ok,they seem like chads.
 

luj1

You're all shills
Vatnik
Joined
Jan 2, 2016
Messages
12,870
Location
Eastern block
This is too bright and colorful. Fruit and fridges with drinks everwhere. Coffee shops, pubs. Looks more like Stardew Valley than post-apoc. Really some of the worst worldbuilding, atmosphere and art direction I ever saw.
 

cyborgboy95

News Cyborg
Joined
Aug 24, 2019
Messages
2,735
https://store.steampowered.com/news/app/1403440/view/3048354870688261295

New Broken Roads Screenshots!
Hey, everyone!

3EJB1cf.jpg


We love the passion for Broken Roads over here, and we can't wait to share more with you!

We're adding more screenshots to the Broken Roads store page, and also some backstory to what you're witnessing - here they are:

New Screens

d45afc1e2c8572b235c3d9915e1fb50fe7b17c35.png

Mishti 'Dreamer' Lewin is one of the scouts at Bally Bally Hall — a natural negotiator.
Dreamer has been given inventory duty when you meet her; she'll be along for your first escort job as a Hired Gun.

466a86e2ee18af11eedca7bd5062d4e5414c5bac.png

Here we have the guy who maintains the radio tower at Kokeby Waystation. He's normally just kicking back & taking in the day. But there's a sudden cause for concern because they've lost contact with one of the dew farmers who come to town to sell water.

3e8b9c6a0407db657f9c8c320e5f02f80fda6a3a.png

"Pleasure to meet you."
Here's a screenshot from the Hired Gun origin story; an introduction to the scouts as you arrive at Bally Bally Hall.

ad297fbd3443d1cd0aac77b44426054e86086117.png

Who might you meet at Kokeby Waystation? A water merchant in from Merredin, maybe a surveyor hiring a crew to follow up on rumours of a new settlement down south? Wherever you're from and wherever you're going, you'll find what you need here.


We'll continue to update you on the lead-up to launch; we have lots of exciting news ahead!
 

cyborgboy95

News Cyborg
Joined
Aug 24, 2019
Messages
2,735
https://www.gamenewsaus.com.au/post/broken-roads-interview

Broken Roads Interview

Bringing the Aussie Outback to you



By now, many of us are well tuned to the abundance of Australian game studios producing great games, but how often do we get to play a game that is set here in Australia? Enter Broken Roads, the debut title from Torquay based studio Drop Bear Bytes.



Broken Roads is a narrative driven RPG that will whisk players through an authentic hand-drawn adventure across the wheatbelt region of Western Australia. Blending together traditional isometric RPG elements with a rich, meaningful narrative, players will venture into a post-apocalyptic wasteland as they attempt to survive in the harsh Australian Outback.


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To learn more about the game, including its custom-made Moral Compass system, we have sat down with Drop Bear Bytes founder and Broken Roads Game Director Craig Ritchie.


Thanks for taking the time to sit down with us to discuss everything Broken Roads and Drop Bear Bytes. Being the studio’s debut game, tell us a little about its formation and team?



So, things started off in late 2018, right around Christmas, when I had been doing some games marketing consultancy work for a few indies. I was speaking to a friend and former manager from CCP Games about my plans for 2019 and he basically said, “Well why not actually try giving your own studio go?” I hadn’t really thought about that for quite some time, but after chatting to my wife and some friends about it, I decided to make that my mission. Drop Bear Bytes’ co-founder, Jethro Naude, is a long-time friend and someone I have worked with on past projects; he liked the idea as well and so we kicked it off!



The studio’s first couple of hires were Tim Sunderland and Kerstin Evans. Tim, our Audio Lead, had posted on Reddit about wanting to try his hand at making music for games and the timing worked out perfectly. Kerstin, our Art Director, was recommended by a mutual contact in industry, and when I saw her portfolio I knew she was exactly what we were looking for.



The team slowly grew from there, and we were very fortunate to be able to find both incredibly talented people who were looking for their first role in industry as well as a number of people who have been doing this for quite some time and like the looks of what we were doing on Broken Roads.


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Broken Roads is set to take players on a meaningful, narrative driven journey across an Australian post-apocalyptic setting. When planning the game, was the idea from the outset to have it centred around the Aussie Outback?



The first idea, in the very beginning, was actually just some unnamed, non-specific location to set a slightly different style of game in. But it was within the first few weeks of ideation when we were paring away some of the ideas that it just made sense to set this in Australia. As so often happens in games, when you are a bit deeper into pre-production you have to scale back considerably on some of the initial plans when you’re working out your scope and what is actually reasonable for such a small team. So, what was actually going to be a journey all the way across Australia just became one focused on the wheatbelt region of Western Australia.



Well we’re certain all the Aussies will appreciate the setting – its not often we get games with an authentic Australian backdrop! How long did the studio spend in the pre-production phase figuring it all out, and was there any perhaps overly ambitious ideas that may have been saved for a follow up title once the studio had grown?



All in, we probably spent around nine months in pre-production, but that includes some time experimenting with tech in Unity. If you want to be very strict about it, it was more like five months before any development started, but there was a lot of design, concepting and planning going on in parallel to that. At one point, right in the beginning, there were more strategic survival and resource-management elements for players to consider through their journey. It wasn’t long before we found those just taking away from the core of the game, which was the story, characters and moral choices, so we focused more on the narrative RPG side. I think we were pretty fixed on the feature set within the first few months, but it was just the amount of content and locations which was ultimately reduced.


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Broken Roads looks to feature the well-proven formula of strategic turn-based combat with traditional isometric gameplay and expansive RPG elements, how has the studio found tackling this genre?



Many of us on the team are huge fans of this genre, having played them since the 90s and really enjoyed the titles that have come out of the resurgence of isometric RPGs over the last decade or so. But with so many great games and everything from cyberpunk-ey futuristic titles such as Shadowrun Returns to epic high fantasy in Pillars of Eternity, the high concept weirdness of Torment: Tides of Numenera and of course what we’ve seen in the Wasteland sequels, we had to set ourselves apart to stand out. Australia just made sense and we leaned into that along with finding our own new take on things with the Moral Compass, and we have really enjoyed it. It’s been fantastic having Colin McComb and Leanne Taylor-Giles on board given their experience specifically in this genre, helping across all departments in the studio by sharing their knowledge in so many ways.

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One of the most exciting things about Broken Roads is this unique ‘Morality System’ Drop Bear Bytes has crafted. Over the course of their journey, players actions will be rated against four areas of moral philosophy: Utilitarianism, Nihilism, Machiavellianism and Humanism. Could you provide some brief insights as to how this system will affect playthroughs?



The Moral Compass is intended to add a lot more depth to the moral decision-making that players are used to in these kinds of RPGs, by being a kind of adaptive and fluid system which aims to encourage consistency of character, while at the same time not being too restrictive. We are achieving this by having it react and slightly adjust based upon dialogue choices, quest resolutions and so on, but also having your companions and other people in the world react to your reputation (and significant moral choices affect that reputation, of course) in different ways based on their own world views.



There are also unique moral traits for the different quadrants on the Moral Compass and sometimes entire pathways are open or closed depending on your character’s moral leaning. On the Moral Compass, players will have a golden arc which represents their world view, as well as a certain amount of ‘tendencies’ which allow them to make lower-level moral decisions in any quadrant, but with greater effect on shifting their golden arc around the Compass.



We are hoping that the outcome for players is something which results in choices and possible actions which feel authentic for the type of character they are role-playing, without a really ‘good’ character able to suddenly make ‘evil’ choices which are totally inconsistent with how they have played the game up until that point.


file.jpg



From the promotional material we’ve seen, Broken Roads is sporting some beautifully hand-drawn artwork, with a distinctive ‘Aussie’ feel. With the game taking place across the wheatbelt region of Western Australia, did the team draw inspiration from many real-life locations?



We’ve done our best to be as authentic as possible. I went to West Aus in 2019 and drove around for a few days, taking loads of photos from the towns and locations that are in the game, and everyone on the team has done a lot of research, reading and watching videos/TV shows/movies set in the region so that the landscapes, locations, flora and fauna are true to the area.



Now, some elements of the narrative, some of the cultural references and so on are inspired from elsewhere but we’re putting in a lot of effort to make it fit WA.




The game also features a cast of up to 6 party members, without giving too much away, can you tell us a little about some of the playable characters in Broken Roads?



We actually recently made the decision to reduce party size to five, so the player character and four companions from a roster of available companions you meet throughout the game. We made this decision for a bunch of reasons: narrative reactivity and party banter, how long turned-based battles can take when you have such large parties, and the effects on scope of having such a wide range of characters in the party at any one time. On the whole, we feel the gameplay is tighter and more fun with one fewer companion than we had originally planned for.


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Was it a tough decision deciding who got the boot? Or did you shift their role into another part of the game?



Oh we didn’t remove anyone from the game – we just reduced the party size from six to five. The characters and companions are all still in there, but who you can take with you at any one time is reduced by one.



Being a small indie studio, how do you organise and plan a project like this, what must be considered?



A lot of emails, a lot of calls, a lot of Slack messages, and because we have a fully distributed team working all around the world, a lot of time zone coordination!



I think the planning comes down to the same principles regardless of studio size - just looking at what we’re aiming to do, how much content we want in the game, what’s reasonably achievable with the team this size and how much it’s going to cost to keep that team going with the estimated time to completion, factoring in bug fixes and polish, and of course the fact that people need to live outside of work, so you’ve got holidays and personal time in there as well.



Then there are marketing considerations and getting the word out in this ultra-competitive industry, doing interviews such as this one and trying to stay active in social media, forums, responding to the community be it on Discord or Steam and of course managing investor relations and conversations with potential publishers, interested hardware partners, and what have you.



There is a lot that goes into making a game with this kind of depth and complexity, where our ambitions for the quality of written content and the quality of the artwork suit the expectations in a genre which has a devoted niche audience we are trying to satisfy.



There certainly is a lot that goes on behind the scenes many may not be aware of. Have you landed on a publisher for Broken Roads or is the search on-going?



We’re not ready – just yet – to reveal this information, but stay tuned for some news in the coming weeks!


file.jpg


How does operating out of Melbourne - the unofficial game development hub of Australia - fare for game development?




The studio is headquartered down in Torquay, about an hour and a half from Melbourne, and since our Art Director moved back to Sydney, we only have one team member (Cienan Muir, Narrative Consultant) still actually based in Melbourne. The proximity is awesome because we’ve had a lot of fantastic support from Film Victoria in being able to just hop on a train go meet them in person, before lockdowns of course, or to have team meetings and a shared office space in Melbourne, again before lockdown, was all great.



I feel really fortunate to be living in regional Victoria because we get such great state support here, can get into the city quickly if we need to (which is also great for PAX Australia) and there is a very large and active game dev community here of course.



Film Victoria certainly seem to be leading the efforts of all the states when it comes to support and output. Speaking of which, the Australian Government recently announced much welcomed support for the Aussie video game industry, will the Digital Economy Strategy help Drop Bear Bytes develop future titles?



It’s all really fantastic to see this kind of thing happening and I think we’re fortunate to be developing games in this country at a time when federal support and the awesome work by the IGEA are all coming together. The tax offset, state initiatives and funding programs, the government response to COVID which has seen things largely get back on track, mentorship and training opportunities provided by IGEA and the hard work of many people behind the scenes to elevate local game developers is really something we should be proud of.



It’s a very good time to be a game developer in Australia.
 
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