GUEST BLOG: Introducing the Develop Teardown workshop
We're bringing something new to Develop this year – a multi-session teardown of Rare's Kinect Sports Rivals that will deliver a
deep insight into developing innovative games.
I think it's an exciting innovation for the Develop
conference, too.
At first glance you might think it's a bit
over-the-top to dedicate so much space and time to just one game, but if
anything the opposite is true. Here's why.
Alien activity
If some alien archaeologist of the future had to
explain the shifts in video game development over the past five to 10 years
with reference only to the historical record of conference programmes and trade
magazines (the games themselves having long since vanished) then he/she/it
might suppose we got bored of making and playing complicated productions.
And from the proliferation of free-to-play conferences
and mobile workshops around the world, you could understand why a six-armed
space-faring academic would reach that conclusion from the headlines.
Yet we all know big development hasn't been seen off
entirely by smartphones, freemium MMOs, indies, and so on.
What it has become is harder to explain to outsiders.
Even 20 years ago, most people working on most
top-of-the-range titles knew everyone on their team. Staff often had input into
more than one aspect of the game. The era of the artist/designer and a myriad
other 'slashes' was at its height, as
studios struggled to cope with challenges that were steepening faster than the
growth of their workforces.
Today, making big console games is a
multi-disciplinary logistical nightmare, made feasible only by specialism,
advances in development frameworks, and producers who've finally wrestled the
whip hand from the most talented coders and creatives who used to speak for
teams. There's simply no other way to drive hugely complicated next gen
projects to completion on time and budget otherwise.
Mindboggling challenges
Indeed I often think modern game development makes
blockbuster filmmaking seem a doddle by comparison.
You're working on the special effects for the new Star Wars? That's nice. Try doing that
while devising the physics of the Star
Wars universe, the AI of its free-roaming characters, a non-linear
narrative to span 40 hours instead of the mere couple in a movie – and all
for an audience that expects to see similar quality on the small screen as at
the cinema.
Oh, and before anyone points to prima donnas sulking
in their trailers game development also has egos to manage…
Making a triple-A video game is like making a
fairground ride with a narrative plot and Newtonian physics on the side. There
are so many moving parts.
As we continue to plod through the Uncanny Valley, it
has to look and feel great, too.
Separate together
No wonder big budget game development is now the
domain of specialists. Yet
even today they hardly operate in a vacuum.
Game artists work to constraints set by the producers
and programmers, for example, while constantly pushing their own requests back, too.
Designers frequently see their vision for the game shift as concept art is
produced or prototyping begins.
Agile development tries to address the Balkanisation
of the creative process by re-integrating the difference disciplines involved,
to harness their interdependence to best achieve the goals at hand. We hope our
multi-session teardown can do something similar.
See the big picture
You see, all this complexity means it's very hard to
get a true sense what it took to make a game in just a single 45-minute
session.
Often I've left a conference session with more
questions than answers!
Sometimes you hear about some particular aspect of a
game's development in detail, for example, but it feels like learning about
just one stop on a gigantic journey. Other times you get a good overview, but
it's a Captain's Log bereft of colour from the engine room.
We hope Rare's teardown will give you as holistic a
view into what goes into making a game today as is possible, short of being on the team yourself.
Please do feel free to make notes for the benefit of
those extra-terrestrial game historians of the future!
This blog was written by Owain Bennellack who is Chair of the Develop in Brighton Advisory Board.