Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current, August 10, 2017, Page 8, Image 8

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    NEWS
B Y K E L LY K E N O Y E R
CRICKET MUNCHING
GAME MAKERS
Local game developers built six games in three days
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INTERNATIONAL STUDENT EXCHANGE PROGRAMS
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ASSE International Student Exchange Program is a Public Benefi t, Non-Profi t Organization.
For privacy reasons, photos above are not photos of actual students
The most awarded craft distillery
in North America is in your backyard...
and at PK Park all season!
Join us each home game at the
T
he image of gamers hanging out with pizza is a pretty standard one, but you usually
don’t see crickets as the pizza topping.
At the Cricket Dare game jam Friday-Sunday, July 28-30, game developers built
games at Fertilab Thinkubator, a coworking space in downtown Eugene. The theme
of the jam was “crickets are good” thanks to a sponsorship by Craft Crickets, a local
cricket farm that sells the insects as eco-friendly protein for human consumption.
The jam coincided with Ludum Dare, an international thrice yearly game jam, so some
gamemakers went with another theme: “running out of power.”
A game jam is a gathering of people interested in making video games — the game mak-
ers get a theme at the beginning of a weekend and have just a few days to build a (semi)-
completed game. More than a dozen people participated, munching on crickets to fuel their
creativity, and six brand new games came out of it.
Checking out the scene on Saturday there were few different teams. One team of three,
Ted Carter, Magdalen Rose and Will Bucknum, built a platformer (think old-school Mario
side-scrollers) fighting game called “The Legend of Cricketoa,” staring a superhero named
Cricket Girl. Carter said, “Cricket Girl’s powers are like chirping and jumping really high.”
Rose added, “We started with crickets, then went to cricket fighter. What would it fight?
Frogs!”
This sort of collaborative storytelling and idea generation is pretty typical of a game jam.
In this team, Rose is the visual artist, Bucknum does sound design, and Carter is the program-
mer, but they all work together to figure out which ideas can come to fruition.
By Saturday afternoon, Carter had set up a robot on his screen to perform fighting mo-
tions, and Rose had created a character design to layer on top of it. On her screen the char-
acter is drawn with each part of each limb separated. Rose said, “This is the character all
segmented, so we’re going to rig it and animate it on a robot and that way it could run and
jump and stuff. All these parts will move separately.”
Another game maker, Jeronemo Rodgers, worked with sound designer Michael Jones to
build “Super Funk Kaiju Cricket.” In that game you play a happy dancing cricket that rams
into buildings to feed and grow in size. Each smashed building lets out a call of encourage-
ment in a deep, excited voice — “Yo,” “Fresshhhh,” or “Rad.”
Ted Brown is a game developer and organizer who has been in the games community in
Eugene for several years. He says he’s proud of what came out of the jam. “Ted and Magda-
len — they had a bigger vision, but they had to cut it short” due to time constraints, he says.
“With Jeronemo, you saw just the emergent playfulness, the kind of wild exploration and
letting the game lead him.”
Brown made his own game to match the Ludum Dare theme of running out of power — a
sort of mining simulation in which robots work to get materials before they run out of fuel.
He says a game jam is an invigorating experience. “Friday, nothing. Sunday, wow, we made
this?”
Brown invites anyone to join in for the next jam, likely to be this winter. “Even if you
don’t know if you like making games or not. When it’s done and you’re quivering and shak-
ing from caffeine and exhaustion, one of two things will happen: either you’ll want to do that
again, or never again. You’ll know in your heart of hearts that this is for you.” ■
For more information on local game jams and the game developer community, go to the Facebook page IGDA:
Eugene (Eugene Area Game Developers). For more info on Ludum Dare, go to ludumdare.com.
upcoming: Friday, Aug 11 - Tuesday, Aug 15
- american hero night at pk park aug 11 -
$0.50 from each hdc cocktail purchase will
be donated to american hero adventures.
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4pm- 6pm
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1400 Valley River Dr.
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Eugene
110 Madison st - Eugene, OR 97402
HeritageDistilling.com #HeritageDistilling
8
A ugust 10, 2017 • eugeneweekly.com
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