A8 OFF PAGE ONE/LOCAL Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, March 17, 2021 Gamer: ‘Generally, I just go on a webpage and type, ‘How do I do this?’ Continued from Page A1 Shepherd said he found a website that was started by an individual who goes by Black Thorn Prod where he could log on and request par- ticipation in the game jam. “The fi rst thing you need is a game engine,” Shepherd said. “You download it and use it to play the game.” A game engine, also known as a game frame- work, is a software-develop- ment environment designed for people to build video games. “It processes all the code and runs it,” he said. It allows you to put visual items in the scene of the game being built. With it, the developer drags a circle into the scene. A “transform” allows one to put items into the circle and place them at X,Y and Z coordinates for width, height and depth. “But my game is just 2D so I only use X and Y coordi- nates,” Shepherd said. He went onto explain some of the technical issues involved. “Then you have to create a new script, which tells it what to do under certain parame- ters using (computer) code,” he said. “Like, in a script, I could say, ‘On mouse, enter,’ which just means when you hover your mouse pointer Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Shepherd Newton, a 12-year-old computer programmer, shows how Level Reset — the game he created recently — works at his Enterprise home Wednesday, March 10, 2021. He already has a business model in mind for use in his professional life one day. over an object, it will trig- ger that thing, that part of a script. You also have open- ing and closing brackets. In there you say, maybe, ‘trans- form scale’ which means, you’re calling for it to trans- form to say, ‘I want my scale to +=’ which means to add it … on the X coordinate and the Y coordinate, an integer … and then it’ll add that to the scale whenever you have your mouse over it.” Crystal was quite aware how far over the head of mere mortals Shepherd was speaking. “He just described the programming terminol- ogy that they use to create a chunk of software that’s part of the game,” she said. “That one chunk would transform however many objects you assign it to.” Crystal tried to translate it into English. “We normal people usu- ally don’t think about cod- ing in that way. We think of a program as one long line, but programmers today actually think of it in terms of chunks of information that they can use over and over again,” she said. They agreed a script can be saved and reused much the same way as a “copy and paste” function is saved and pasted in and out of a word processor’s clipboard. “Eventually, it all com- piles together and what the end user sees isn’t like the scripts he described, but the actions those scripts call for,” Crystal said. “It’s like pack- ing a dresser and instead of one big object, there’s all these diff erent drawers. This thing he just described is how you would defi ne one action for a game.” But how did a 12-year- old learn all this at his ten- der age? “Generally, I just go on a webpage and type, ‘How do I do this?’ and I watch a ton of tutorials, and eventually your brain learns to comprehend something,” he said. Crystal admitted much of what the rest of her fam- ily does with computers is beyond her. “I will tell you, as the wife of my husband the mother of my son, I don’t think this way,” she said. “I think it’s pretty much a natural abil- ity that they can handle it with the tutorials and the learning.” While Shepherd’s game, called “Level Reset” didn’t gain a high ranking during the game jam — “Some- where near the bottom,” he said — it was a start. He hopes to participate in more game jams later this year. “He is working on some other games,” Crystal said. “I do artwork, so I’m creating some artwork for a game he and I talked about making. He’s always talking about diff erent games he wants to work on. I think, what the game jam did, was give him a goal within a specifi c period of time that he had to achieve something he could submit.” Shepherd doesn’t spend all his time on the computer. He’s been involved in 4-H, having raised a prize-win- ning 39-pound turkey, and participated in archery and robotics. He also plays games with his parents. In a way, he fi nds it an advantage being an only child. “If I had brothers and sis- ters, I think I might be hin- dered by them saying, ‘Let’s go play,’” he said. His parents are eager to see how Shepherd’s com- puter skills blossom. “We always talk to him about how he needs to build career skills through this,” Tim said. “We have expecta- tions how he should use this in the future as a career or on a business.” “For the fi rst game that he made up, I was pretty proud of him — and he didn’t stop doing his schoolwork,” Crystal said. “We were doing school, too.” Eagle Cap Shooters to build new facility Received $50,000 grant from NRA By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — Plans call for a groundbreaking in April for a new educa- tional building at the Eagle Cap Shooters Range north of Enterprise, according to a press release. The Eagle Cap Shoot- ers Educational Alliance received a $50,000 grant from the National Rifl e Association in 2020 and the alliance has nearly raised the required matching funds to pay for the new structure, said Stephen Wolfe, presi- dent of the alliance. “We’re almost to the deadline of $50,000,” he said. Wolfe said the alliance continues to raise money through donations and gun raffl es, both on its website and at the Stubborn Mule in Joseph. AR Proudly Supporting Wallowa County Agriculture “We’re planning on ask- ing a group of people to come in and give some donations,” Wolfe said. “We’re almost there and we’ll probably need a bit more.” Gina Birkmaier, vice president of the alliance, said in the press release that the multipurpose building will provide an indoor facil- ity for classes, events and training activities. Classes will be off ered to range members, law enforcement personnel, nonprofi t groups and to civic and charitable organizations, the release said. The current facilities at the range include a 1,000- yard covered rifl e range, a 50-yard covered pistol range, a 1,150-yard black powder cartridge range, a shotgun range with an elec- tric turret and fi ve competi- tion bays. 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