Elwro
Arcane
What happened with this Bubbles guy? Did he pull an Exitium or what? Seems like a worthwile content-provider.
Anyway here is a 28 page summery of what went down. http://www.rpgcodex.net/forums/index.php?threads/where-my-bubbles-gone.112302/
tl;dr: He got mad at Infinitron and it was all Prime Junta's fault.
It's been a while now but the only defect I remember was coming across three copies of the personal letter from a father to his son or something. It was like the level designer really wanted players to experience that fluff.
Yes, very interesting interview, to Josh, Bubbles and Roguey.
We're making a tank MMO game, and that's like half the company.
Feargus is weak and needs to be removed if Obsidian wants to actually become good.
Feargus is weak and needs to be removed if Obsidian wants to actually become good.
To be fair, he is letting Sawyer do his niche historical game.
we should do feargus interview to make codex warm up to him and then shit on the next dude in obsidianFeargus is weak and needs to be removed if Obsidian wants to actually become good.
Tags: J.E. Sawyer; Obsidian Entertainment; Pillars of Eternity; Pillars of Eternity: The White March
Back in August, Obsidian Design Director and Codex anti-hero Josh Sawyer gave a talk at the annual Game Developers Conference in Cologne, Germany. The video of the talk, which was a Pillars of Eternity retrospective entitled Looking Back and Moving Forward with Pillars of Eternity, has yet to be publicly released, but the original slides and a summary are available. But that's not what this post is about. Former Codex contributor Bubbles was in the audience for that talk, and after it was done he met up with Josh for what was meant to be a brief interview. They ended up talking for nearly two and a half hours.
A couple of days after that Bubbles was off to Gamesom, and unfortunately he never got around to transcribing his recording of the interview before his unfortunate departure. We did however manage to secure Bubbles' permission to allow the Codex's #1 Josh Sawyer fan, Roguey, to transcribe the interview in his stead. We sent the recording to Roguey, expecting a long wait...and were provided with a near-perfect transcript less than 72 hours later. Probably should have done that sooner. So there you have it, four months late and just in time to be the last piece of Codex content for 2016. Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and enjoy the read. It's a long one.
Read the full article: RPG Codex Interview: Josh Sawyer at GDC Europe 2016
Thank you for answering our questions, Josh. The antidote is in the next room. We will be watching.
What thenfuckmis a blobber. Please kill all Europeans
yeah thats a dumb term
Josh said:i believe we did thin them out in 3.0.you knew that fucking temple had too many enemies and you did nothing you fucker
Josh said:it is difficult to achieve expectations with a game like this. some players want it to have as many NPCs as BG2, but all at the depth and reactivity of torment NPCs, with all of the stat-based dialogue, plus skill-, class-, and race-based dialogue that wasn't in the IE games, all in a game that's no shorter than icewind dale at a bare minimum.
Josh said:it doesn't come across in the transcript but the interviewer had a strong accent and i just didn't understand what he said there.Like Tyranny?
Like what?
Tyranny.
Oh... yeah
Are you fucking kidding me?One of the things we're looking at for skills is allowing for people to contribute more directly to skill checks, so if you have a character who has skills that could apply to dialogue, they can apply to those additively
Companions are still gonna be your slaves, I see.There are no outside forces forcing him to do anything in particular.
In general I would say that's true. And that's more that they would call on companions to help them than companions would just jump in front of them to do something.
Are you fucking kidding me?
Not this shit again.
Feargus is weak and needs to be removed if Obsidian wants to actually become good.
http://www.redbull.com/en/games/stories/1331721253309/pillars-of-eternity-what-next-for-obsidianIn fact, around eight years ago, Obsidian actually turned down the opportunity to do the first Game of Thrones RPG.
“I don’t know if the project would have ever happened,” says Urquhart, candidly, “but we were approached by a big publisher, and they had the Game of Thrones licence at the time. And I love Game of Thrones – it’s an incredibly rich story and world and obviously the characterisation is amazing. But, there’s a couple of things about it that are challenging if you want to make a roleplaying game.
“Part of it was very interesting to us because of the focus on characters, and that’s kind of what we do. But if you think about the world, it’s so much about the politics and it’s so much about the linear story of what’s going on. Then you tie that to magic playing a very little role, and to be honest, [the story is] mostly [about] people. There’s not a lot of standard role-playing fantasy things, [like] putting an adventuring party together and going to find the abandoned ruins full of zombies and witches and ghosts and spectres and ghouls and all that kind of stuff.
Easy for him to act like players had unrealistic expectations, but the team itself set the tone by promising to combine the IE games:Haha, yeah, "some players."
Project Eternity will take the central hero, memorable companions and the epic exploration of Baldur’s Gate, add in the fun, intense combat and dungeon diving of Icewind Dale, and tie it all together with the emotional writing and mature thematic exploration of Planescape: Torment
Yeah, I remember that interview. Shows how clueless he was about the IP and how they wasted a huge opportunity for stupid reasons. He says that magic plays a "very little role", but that's only in the time depicted in the books/show (though I'd argue it's not that small). The licensed games had complete freedom to choose different eras, which is what the strategy game ended up doing. They could've picked a different setting without the constraints placed by the books. ASOIAF has the Others and wights, which have more potential than regular zombies, and also dragons, direwolves, firewyrms, ice spiders, several forms of magic, witches, druids, skinchanging, and a lot more traditional RPG stuff. He is right that it has more potential for a strategy game, but that doesn't mean there isn't a great RPG to be made there.Feargus is weak and needs to be removed if Obsidian wants to actually become good.
http://www.redbull.com/en/games/stories/1331721253309/pillars-of-eternity-what-next-for-obsidianIn fact, around eight years ago, Obsidian actually turned down the opportunity to do the first Game of Thrones RPG.
“I don’t know if the project would have ever happened,” says Urquhart, candidly, “but we were approached by a big publisher, and they had the Game of Thrones licence at the time. And I love Game of Thrones – it’s an incredibly rich story and world and obviously the characterisation is amazing. But, there’s a couple of things about it that are challenging if you want to make a roleplaying game.
“Part of it was very interesting to us because of the focus on characters, and that’s kind of what we do. But if you think about the world, it’s so much about the politics and it’s so much about the linear story of what’s going on. Then you tie that to magic playing a very little role, and to be honest, [the story is] mostly [about] people. There’s not a lot of standard role-playing fantasy things, [like] putting an adventuring party together and going to find the abandoned ruins full of zombies and witches and ghosts and spectres and ghouls and all that kind of stuff.
Yep, Obs needs a brave new leader who shouldn't be afraid of making RPGs outside traditional norms.
Right, the company what made Kotor 2, alpha potatocol, south park etc., is unwilling to consider a not-very-traditional rpg.
Feargus has a big mouth, but he rarely talks about the stuff they've turned down. Surely because it's embarrassing to tell everyone you're the guy who passed on a huge opportunity.Usually with Obsidian, what happens isn't that they turn down cool IP opportunities
There's also (4) pitch something they couldn't possibly get, like the Star Wars games they pitched to Disney after EA had already signed the exclusivity deal with them.they (1) beg for it but don't get it, (2) persuade a publisher who then bones them over, (3) beg, persuade, get half-boned, get it out the door, and it's a buggy mess
Feargus said in one of the Matt Chats that he's always involved in pitches, and MCA said he was involved in a few, but not much is known about the other partners.I wonder what the decision making process is for things like these though, Feargus is obviously the guy for it but they're also supposed to have a Five Founders (uh, Four) structure.
Paradox owns Tyranny, not Obsidian. They created the IP and sold it. Might as well license an existing one.Whatever happens, I hope they keep pushing for their own IPs. At least there they get to set the constraints. Do that a few times and they will get good at it. Tyranny was a fairly minor faceplant in the grand scheme of things and probably didn't lose them money, and it is to be hoped that the people working on it learned something.
I would really love it if they pushed boundaries a bit. Tyranny tried at least. If Pillars ends up as their bread-and-butter and they do some smaller, experimental projects on the side, that'd be pretty cool already. (Josh's historical-mythical TB Darklands spiritual successor for one.)
who knows it might just took off and made obsidian took off GoT is a big IP with a huge followers. The ip is just perfect for obsidian with their focus on writing and c&cGotta say Sawyer at least knows his shit, good straightforward interview, still don't like a lotta design on Poe but at least hes acknowledgin some o faults.
Forgot about Obs rejectin GoT but Fearghus is just facin reality there, most players want usual shit an plenty on it, wi a good dose o more streamlinin an stripped features to top it off.
Are you fucking kidding me?
Not this shit again.
He gives examples of how that would be appropriate, and is against using it in places where it wouldn't make sense.
Clearly the Lord of Balance would carefully consider how high those checks would need to be so that not anyone can pass every check on the strength of just any companion combination alone, unlike Tyranny.