Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length

 
Advanced search

1411485 Posts in 69371 Topics- by 58427 Members - Latest Member: shelton786

April 24, 2024, 04:34:26 AM

Need hosting? Check out Digital Ocean
(more details in this thread)
TIGSource ForumsCommunityDevLogsReturn of the Obra Dinn [Releasing Oct 18]
Pages: 1 ... 34 35 [36] 37 38 ... 44
Print
Author Topic: Return of the Obra Dinn [Releasing Oct 18]  (Read 935415 times)
ckimbrough
Level 0
*



View Profile
« Reply #700 on: December 04, 2016, 02:14:34 PM »

Just now discovering this game; looks so interesting! I would have loved to try it at PAX Kiss
Logged
dukope
Level 3
***


View Profile WWW
« Reply #701 on: December 07, 2016, 03:35:37 AM »

Game-making skill level: dukope.

Wow, thanks so much. This is really encouraging :0

Quote
The current "place-holder" everybody's portrait looks so cool. Most other developer would just keep it for the gem it is. Are you sure you want to replace it with some hand-made impression by some however-good artist? The current image is also very well integrated with the rest of the art style (by construction) -- I understand that this would be more fitting for a photograph, which it cannot be, but it will be hard preserve the style consistency with something which must also comply to the look of a XIX century drawing... good luck!

There'll be a lot more to post about this later, but yeah, I've had some trouble getting the sketch to do what I want. It took testing 3 artists, hiring one of them, and fiddling with the result to realize what this sketch needs, and how to do it.

I really want it to be a hand-drawn sketch though. Using the render directly isn't as legible (saw this at PAX), and does nothing to suggest anything interesting to the player. I'm currently drawing (tracing really) the whole thing myself with a focus on all the stuff I've learned from the other artists - about the limitations of 1-bit and requirements of the gameplay.



Work in progress trace


I'm learning as I go so the best I can manage right now is about 4-6 characters per day. I'll write up the details when it's all done.
Logged

JobLeonard
Level 10
*****



View Profile
« Reply #702 on: December 07, 2016, 04:07:44 AM »

Oooh... those shading lines on the zoomed in portrait work so well with the low-res dithering Kiss
Logged
Thaumaturge
Level 10
*****



View Profile WWW
« Reply #703 on: December 07, 2016, 10:17:56 AM »

Likewise, I really like the effect of shading-lines and dithering; it really conveys the feeling of an old-fashioned illustration or woodcut, and works rather well with the one-bit "colour"-scheme, I feel. ^_^
Logged

papyrus
Level 0
*



View Profile WWW
« Reply #704 on: December 14, 2016, 06:08:11 AM »

Wow, now this is awesome.
I really like the 1-bit rendering, that's like super original.
can't wait to play it!
Logged

Take a look at my yt channel if you want : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzHd3rF7OtcRl8nwjhn2TBg
kinnas
Level 5
*****



View Profile WWW
« Reply #705 on: December 14, 2016, 07:13:40 AM »

That's a surprisingly legible and readable sketch considering the 1-bit limitation. In fact I'm surprised it works so well, nice!
Logged

rjw801
Level 0
*


View Profile
« Reply #706 on: December 30, 2016, 08:41:37 AM »

Another possible way to solve the page hunt issue: perhaps all the pages could be present in the manifest from the beginning, but some could be strangely blank at first. Certain events would make the writing magically appear on the pages. This is in keeping with the otherworldly power of the Memento Mortis, and would provide a way to make it obvious how many pages need to be "found" without having to explicitly tell the player with a HUD element, since you have them all from the start.
Logged
mtarini
Level 1
*


View Profile WWW
« Reply #707 on: January 04, 2017, 07:41:06 PM »

That's a good idea, in my humble opinion!
Keeping the same concept, maybe magical "drawing" can be substituted with anything which is deemed more fitting story-wise or setting-wise.

Maybe the pages aren't blank: they are covered with coagulated blood, or blackened (giant squid ink? Wink), or even burned away (the typical big hole in the middle with tarred boundaries -- it doesn't matter that the next page is not visible though it).
Either way, this would only affects the central part of the page -- the borders, including "Artist sketches" on top and maybe page number on bottom,  would be legible. And, when revealed, they could then "reverse-burn", or the blood would fade away or be "reverse splattered", etc.
The transition animation, which would be triggered the first time the revealed page is accessed, is definitely a chance for some interesting effect, maybe a variation of current transition to "that-moment-mode".


Logged

Warballs! · spherical fierceness · 1P · free · arena fighter · challenging
Connor
Level 8
***


Smooth talker, musician. Loves all things 70s.


View Profile WWW
« Reply #708 on: January 04, 2017, 07:43:53 PM »

i enjoy reading about the different research you're conducting in order to make this, its really interesting ^^;
this still seems amazing, keep it up man!
Logged

Firearrow games
www.firearrowgames.net

blitzkampfer:
https://forums.tigsource.com/index.php?topic=52009.msg1280646#msg1280646

too bad eggybooms ents are actually men in paper mache suits and they NEED to be agile
One Happy Giant
Level 0
**



View Profile WWW
« Reply #709 on: January 05, 2017, 06:49:01 PM »

Just stumbled upon this devlog and realized I played it at GDC 2016. Love the 1-bit graphics and the unconventional gameplay. Cheers! Coffee
Logged

dukope
Level 3
***


View Profile WWW
« Reply #710 on: January 06, 2017, 10:48:05 PM »

[Manifest reveal idea #1]

[Manifest reveal idea #2]

These are both cool ideas. Will experiment, thanks!
Logged

dukope
Level 3
***


View Profile WWW
« Reply #711 on: January 06, 2017, 10:51:50 PM »

Another (hopefully final) post on the game's manifest crew sketch.

Manifest Sketch, Part Final

The latest manifest contains three gameplay-critical sections: the crew list, the crew sketch, and the deck map. Each one serves a different purpose and the sketch is probably the most important for actually tracking identities. There are three sketches in this section, each of a different scene. All together, they contain every single character from the game exactly once. I played with a few different arrangements before settling on these scenes:

    1. "Under Way" - A view of the top deck where crew and passengers celebrate with games, drinking, and dancing.
    2. "Formosan Royalty" - An interior view of the 4 Formosan passengers.
    3. "Justice At Sea" - A wide view of an unknown character's execution for an unknown crime, witnessed by officers and crew.


The three scenes arranged as they appear in the manifest


The purpose of these sketches is to allow the player to remember and correlate characters with their names and fates, outside of the flashbacks. There's also several clues about identity packed in here. Being able to recognize the characters in the sketch is important and we're working against the translation to 1-bit in-game, which is pretty brutal.

There were no cameras in 1800 and from the beginning these renders were intended as concepts of how the sketches should appear, to be later drawn by hand in the style of an old fountain pen sketch. With just the wrong mix of bravery and naivety, I originally planned to draw these myself.


Fail Hard, Early

Before even getting the final scene concepts I tried just tracing over a test scene render by hand. The result was not pretty:


Ummm


Later, I got the actual manifest scenes all posed up in 3D (without clothing) and gave it another shot. This time with tracing paper and an honest to god fountain pen. The kind you need to dip in a bottle of ink:


Jesus...


My lack of skill is obvious here. Thoroughly deterred, I tried another tack. Instead of tracing the whole thing by hand, I shaded a few characters with even contour lines and experimented with procedurally applying this hand-drawn element to the render itself.


...Christ


I won't show the results because I didn't save them. And the idea didn't work at all. Ok, next step. Hire a professional.


Professionals

Looking for help, I asked three pro artists to sketch the smallest scene with just four characters. TIG's very own Paul McClintock approached me first and we were able to work through some stylistic choices that looked best under the game's limitations. Carl Frank and Ahmed Omar both cold-emailed the ratloop.com site offering their skills. All three are excellent artists. Paul's portraits are especially amazing and Carl and Ahmed cover a wide variety of styles deftly.

The trial was based on this render of the 4 Formosan characters. Like the other renders, this one is pretty rough and needs cleanup (buggy cloth sim on the girl) or additions (spears for the guards, a stool for the old fella) during sketching.


Render used for the artist trial

Direction

"Make this render look like an old-timey sketch." I gave each artist the concept render, information about the game setting, presentation limitations, and direction about artistic style. I asked for something close to the rough pen & ink ensemble sketches of the period.


Some sketches included in the style guide


Results

Each artist was able to do a few revisions based on my feedback. Their final results are below along with how they appear in-game.





I consider these all excellent and it was great working with everyone. To make a choice on who to hire for the full job, I broke it down into plusses and minuses for each.

Paul McClintock
  + Detailed shading translates well to 1-bit low resolution
  -  Characters are nicely detailed but likenesses diverge from the render

Carl Frank
  + Bold lines work perfectly in 1-bit low resolution
  + Character likenesses are dead on
  -  Feels very modern, more "Archer" than "old fountain pen sketch"

Ahmed Omar
  + Matches the period style perfectly
  + Done on actual pen and paper
  + Character likenesses catch the salient features without overloading on detail
  -  Hard to get it legible in 1-bit low resolution
  -  Lack of detail makes it less useful for the player


Full Sketch

At the end, I decided to go for Ahmed's less gameplay-functional but more period-appropriate work. He came back very quickly with the full sketch of all 3 scenes.


Ahmed's sketch of all 3 scenes


This looks great in your hand but unfortunately the roughness that I liked in his first sketch works heavily against legibility in the other denser scenes. We tried a few revisions to tighten up the details but nothing translated that well to the game.


Second Try

At this point, PAX Australia had passed and there was less time pressure. I decided to take another crack at it myself. Studying the pro artists' work taught me a few things and helped define exactly what I wanted:

  • A trace of the render (to get the likenesses as close to the in-game models as possible and maximize the sketch's utility)
  • Detailed shading similar to the period and medium (for the right feel while zoomed, and varied shades while zoomed out)
  • Clear separation of the characters from each other and the background (to help legibility while unzoomed)

I also collected some supplies:

  • A book: "Rendering in Pen and Ink" by Arthur L. Guptill
  • Hardware: iPad Pro with Apple Pencil
  • Software: "Procreate" drawing app


iPad Pro + Apple Pencil

In my normal efforts, I use an old Wacom Bamboo tablet for hand-drawing stuff. It works well enough and I actually prefer it over something like the Cintiq for small things. For this sketch though I knew I'd want to draw directly on the image and not have any screen/tablet separation. Years ago I had an HP TC1100 "Pen PC" which was pretty hot shit at the time. The iPad Pro and Apple Pencil are the new and well-reviewed hotness these days so I decided to try that. Damn. It's good.


The Killer Combo


The pen tracking speed is extremely fast and the glass is super thin, so you draw pretty much exactly where the tip is. And because it's totally self-contained you can spin and adjust the iPad itself while drawing, which I find really convenient and is not possible with a big wired Cintiq or similar. Together with the "Procreate" app they give you a great drawing environment. Photoshop's app is also good but I found the pen options in Procreate better - the fountain pen brush I made looked and behaved better than Photoshop's alternatives.

There are two negatives to the iPad/Pencil combo that I found. One, the screen is too slick, and two, the Pencil nub is too fat. I added a matte screen cover that takes care of the slick screen and makes it very pleasant for drawing. The fat Pencil nub can't be fixed but I got used to it ok enough.


My Sketch

Even with all the helpful guidance and expensive hardware, it still took a good bit more experimentation and practice to get a result I could manage and was happy with. My final sketch is probably closest to Carl Frank's work, but with more classic, woodcut-style shading and rougher, more homogenous backgrounds. I also separate each character from others with a narrow void, not visible in this 4-character sketch.

My experiments with real fountain pens taught me a little about the wide range of line thicknesses that are possible naturally. For this digital version I made sure to keep the pen's base thickness fixed for all characters near and far and rely on pressure differences to adjust the width slightly up or down. Hopefully that helps sell the idea a little more that it could've been done by hand on real media.

And not to be confused for actual skill, I consider my direct tracing to be skill-adjacent at best. Some concept artists sorta work this way but not to the extreme degree that I'm doing here. There's a tiny bit of solace in the knowledge that I also modeled, textured, and posed all these characters but it would've been nice to have enough freehand skill to make the sketch feel more natural. Oh well.



My 4-character sketch



The whole thing. Several weeks of work.



Closeup

This is "finished" in the sense that I'll move on to other stuff now. There are still a few details and changes pending. Some characters will get tattoos, tri-corner hats for the officers, those goofy dudes are meant to be playing dice, maybe redraw some faces. Also I need to add titles to each sketch and the in-game artist's signature.

Looking at it as is, I'd say it's way too clean and precise for the period. Especially if I want to suggest that it was drawn on a ship at sea. Tracing a 3D render makes it just too well-rendered for something that's supposed to be entirely hand drawn. One of the lessons from the pro artists though was that it's best to start with something clean, then distress/rough it up later. The game's 1-bit low res presentation totally shits all over the source data, often in unexpected ways, and it's better to go in being too clean than too rough.


Timelapse

One nice bonus of using Procreate is that it automatically captures a timelapse video for everything drawn in the app. It's a pretty low resolution by default (I fixed this much later in the recording) and loses some sessions inexplicably, but it's good enough for me to post up on YouTube. You can see me trying a bunch of different styles at the start before settling on a more refined woodcut-ish style.


First sketch timelapse in GIF form



youtu.be/Zpe2Ivnei14
All sketches. Slower + closeups.

Logged

sam_suite
Level 1
*



View Profile WWW
« Reply #712 on: January 06, 2017, 11:31:54 PM »

Wow. your level of dedication/perfectionism is awe-inspiring and kind of maddening. looks like it's paid off in spades, though -- if there's anything you just absolutely have to get exactly right, it's probably this. looks incredible.
Logged

Rarykos
Level 1
*



View Profile WWW
« Reply #713 on: January 07, 2017, 09:14:49 AM »

What I love about this sketching experiment is it shows somebody coming from the tech side of things learning how to draw.
"You could do the same if you had the time and dedication required"

Great job!
« Last Edit: January 07, 2017, 01:30:59 PM by Rarykos » Logged

Sporkaganza
Level 0
**


View Profile
« Reply #714 on: January 07, 2017, 03:15:43 PM »

Since you can't see the face of the man being executed, I'm going to assume he's crucially important to the mystery in some way.
Logged
William Chyr
Level 8
***



View Profile WWW
« Reply #715 on: January 08, 2017, 12:12:55 PM »

Been a while since I've checked in on this. Holy cow. Great work. Looks like a tremendous amount of progress since last GDC.




Initially I thought this was rendered and thought you had perfected the hand-drawn sketch aesthetic! "How did he get those imperfections in there!?"
Logged

plauk
Level 0
**



View Profile WWW
« Reply #716 on: January 09, 2017, 11:54:45 PM »

I appreciate you calling me a professional. :D

Your version turned out great. The clean, precise hatching looks quite good and the thick outline in combination with the extra white 'outline' is definitely going to help people make sense of the overall scene.
Logged
goldrush76
TIGBaby
*


View Profile
« Reply #717 on: January 11, 2017, 07:42:18 AM »

Hi,
Like many others I'm super intrigued by this game but I also couldn't find a note anywhere if there is an estimated "completion" date for the game, as in, no longer in alpha or beta... ready for Steam distribution type release?

Or is the timeline basically "It's ready when its ready" ?

I'm curious about trying it now but I also want to hold back and be patient for the product that will have a whole lot of remaining items worked out... whether its storyline, artwork bugs, functionality... etc, etc, etc.

Either way, very excited for this project and the developer!
Logged
kuubaas
Level 0
**



View Profile
« Reply #718 on: January 20, 2017, 01:11:18 AM »

Been a while since I've checked in on this. Holy cow. Great work. Looks like a tremendous amount of progress since last GDC.




Initially I thought this was rendered and thought you had perfected the hand-drawn sketch aesthetic! "How did he get those imperfections in there!?"

I can't help but notice the uncanny similarity in color palette between this sketch and Manifold Garden.

Obra Dinn should definitely include a MG palette mode.
Logged

technical artist for no truce with the furies
dukope
Level 3
***


View Profile WWW
« Reply #719 on: January 23, 2017, 06:52:38 AM »

[...] Or is the timeline basically "It's ready when its ready" ?

At this point, yeah. There's an internal set of milestones but I run into extra complexities at pretty much every turn. When I'm more comfortable with the end date, I'll roll an announcement trailer and put the word out.


[...]Initially I thought this was rendered and thought you had perfected the hand-drawn sketch aesthetic! "How did he get those imperfections in there!?"[...]

Working on the sketch actually confused me a little bit on the visuals. The 3D stuff is focused on legibility in 1-bit but it approaches a sketched style closely enough that a few wires needed uncrossing after I finished the sketch and went back to 3D.


[...]Obra Dinn should definitely include a MG palette mode.[...]

Smiley
Logged

Pages: 1 ... 34 35 [36] 37 38 ... 44
Print
Jump to:  

Theme orange-lt created by panic