Wednesday, 21 December 2016

P5E – Legal and Ethical issues

P5E – Legal and Ethical issues

My video game needs to consider all of the possible legal and ethical issues. With the game being based on horror and survival there will be some issues that would need to be accounted for. The main issue is of the game is not properly rated at the correct age then there could be underage gamers playing the game and becoming scared. This would have to be looked into and a proper evaluation of the games age rating will need to be accounted for. One of the other ethical issues is that the game includes monsters and demons which some people may consider offensive and scary. Efforts will need to be taken place to ensure that the monsters and demons apply to all laws and regulations and are ethically and spiritually correct.

Legal issues involve the games soundtrack and visuals. The song needs to be original and not copyrighted otherwise there will be a problem. The visuals also have to be original and the game engine has to be properly purchased and licensed for the development of that particular game.

P5D – Target Audience

P5D – Target Audience
My target audience is mainly adults and younger adults who are of any gender and have an interest in puzzle solving or horror games themselves. The game will be rated at a 16 and so the audience is aimed at the more mature player and the game aims for more hard-core gamers as the puzzles can get quite challenging and the gameplay mechanics can become confusing for casual gamers. The game will focus on making the experience as scary as possible for the player and so this game is not suited for kids and young persons. The game is a survival horror and so there will also be a lot of jump scares which means that more mature audiences have to be targeted.

The game is gender neutral as it doesn’t sway more towards a specific gender or stereotype. The game will be filled with dark colours and monsters and the main character’s feature both male and female characters. The puzzles will also be neutrally coloured and the game will try and convince all different types of gamers to play through the game

Tuesday, 20 December 2016

P5C - Gameplay With Associated Visuals


Production Schedule




The pictures above show the entire plan of the production schedule for Room 109. The production process starts in September 2017 and finishes in August 2018 and will run for around 48 weeks in total. It will start with the planning stages and each stage has been highlighted in a different colour to show the different stages of production. Down the left hand side each stage has been broken down into individual sections that explain exactly what is going to be happening during each week of production.

P5B - Production Schedule Budget


P5A - Proposal


Room 109 Proposal


Format:  Video Game



                                                                                                                                                                   
Video Game: My video game’s title is ‘Room 109’ although this might change. This is the room that is most featured in the game and is where all the people are kept. It also refers to the room where the main monster of the game is hiding out, most of the main section of the game is played within this fictional room inside an abandoned hospital.
After some locals from the town go missing without a trace, three boys break into an old abandoned hospital on a school photography project only to find that all the locals are being held captive by the monster who is living in the hospital. The story reveals the lives of each individual and how they all link to each other in one way or another. The player must put the pieces of the puzzle together to find out the true meaning of why these people have been taken.

Genre: The game will be a Horror/puzzle solving game. The game will be played out in a very eerie tone and there will be frequent jump scares for the players. It will include many clues throughout the game that will lead up to the final puzzle at the end of the game. It is focused very heavily on the story and will be played from the first person point of view with some out of body experiences during some of the cut scenes.

Synopsis: The game follows a group of young teenagers who break into an abandoned hospital to take some photos for a school project. What they find inside is truly horrifying. The game opens on the characters in school being told about this project, this then leads onto some cut scenes of the boys preparing to go into the hospital. The player follows David, who is one of the boys, and the three others as they embark on this journey. The game will be story heavy and so there will be a lot of cut scenes which should help to break down the fast gameplay. The cut scenes will be cinematic and follow the lives of the people who have been taken from their local town and it will take some time to play through the full game to piece together the puzzle

Style or Approach: The game will focus heavily on the story and will include a realistic approach to the styling with the aim to make it look as real and as immersive as possible. The style will be very dark with not a lot of light running through the game but in the hope of creating a very scary and eerie environment.

Audience: My target audience is mainly adults and younger adults who are of any gender and have an interest in puzzle solving or horror games themselves. The game will be rated at a 16 and so the audience is aimed at the more mature player and the game aims for more hardcore gamers as the puzzles can get quite challenging and the gameplay mechanics can become confusing for casual gamers

Length: A play through of the game is projected for at least 12hours of solid gameplay, however this will take a lot longer the first time the player plays as the game as the puzzles are quite challenging and all the clues will take a while to find. The game can be played through in a quicker concession but there needs to be a lot of story and gameplay behind the game so that players will play it again and will become immersed in the experience during the playthrough  

Platform: The game will be released on multiple platforms including the Xbox one and PlayStation 4 it will also be released and mainly promoted for the PC. This is due to the consoles not having as much power to work with the game and so all trailers and artwork will be taken form the PC release of the game. It will be promoted and distributed on the PC via Steam meaning that all copies sold on PC will be of digital download. Console releases of the game will come out slightly later than PC releases and will be sold in all major shops and retailers

Levels: The game will feature a lot of differently designed and unique levels. The game flows from one level to the other with an AutoSaving feature implemented so that players don’t lose any data. There will be no loading times either between levels so they will almost be seeming less as the player progresses through the game

Characters: The game features three main characters who are all different from one another and all contribute to the story in one way or another. Danny is the main character he is alos the character that the player controls and everything is seen through his eyes. The other two characters are Charlie and Megan. The other characters will be the monsters and demons that the players have to face but the emphasis is on the puzzles not on the monsters themselves

P4 - Battlefield 4 Review






Battlefield 4 Review



Battlefield 4 is the 3rd edition to the modern series of the Battlefield franchise. It is an action packed first person shooter that is set 6 years after the events of Battlefield 3, in New York, and features both single player and multiplayer capabilities. For the very hardcore battlefield fanboys, this was a long awaited release in the current series of games and surely EA and DICE have come up with a good enough release to rival some of the best other first person shooters out there today.


Genre

The Battlefield franchise really has progressed form the original release of Battlefield 1942, which was one of the most adventurous FPS of its time as it was the first game to include all-out war with open world maps and vehicle combat. Ever since this release the battlefield franchise has just been getting better and better, apart from Battlefield 2142 which seemed to take a step back as it was marked down by users. Battlefield 2 was the first modern day shooter to come to the battlefield franchise and brought along a whole load of new features. It was the game that most people say was the backbone to the development of the newest battlefield games with many of today’s features, such as the commander mode, being featured in the newest release. Can this new battlefield title match the level of expertise that the foundation games were built on?


Platforms

From the start you will find that DICE have made the game slightly differently for consoles as they have for the PC in terms of how the game is started. From the initial boot up of the game console players will find themselves in a rather well designed menu screen with smart and simple UI. PC users will find themselves on the battlelog webpage. This webpage is the backbone to the game and provides the launcher, forums and stats engine that players are going to use heavily, battlelog can track every single player’s progression and can allow for players to compare stats within the community. It also forms the base for the launch engine for PC as everything is launched through battlelog. It includes server lists, relevant challenges and the campaign mode. Console users will find that they will launch the game normally and be presented with similar menus once inside the game, but can still use the battlelog website to view their stats and unlocks.

Narrative

Battlefield 4 is very multiplayer focused and so for that matter, like the previous release, the game has suffered in the campaign mode with many faults and bugs appearing as if the campaign wasn’t properly finished or was rushed to get the game out on time. This is a real shame considering after battlefield 3, the community really wanted the campaign to be dropped altogether as they said it was rushed and unfinished to allow for the game to be released on time. This can be said about Battlefield 4 but you really would think that after such a negative vibe towards the last games singleplayer, they would either drop it all together or pull out all the stops to make the campaign the best it can be.


During the production of the game the developers said that they would be including a brand new innovative gameplay feature called “levolutions”. This involves a certain part of the map changing to completely change the aspect of the round that the players can trigger through a number of steps, this can be anything from a skyscraper falling down in Siege of Shanghai, to a dam breaking a completely flooding a town in Flood Zone. The levolutions work really well on some maps but on others I feel as though they rather spoil the game, turning the map into a rather ruined flat mess.

After the most recent updates it seems like the guys at DICE have finally pulled up their socks and fixed the net code and rubber banding issues within the earlier versions of the game. This is only true however after the first few hours of playing the game as it still does suffer from these net coding and bad lag issues. This is still one of the main things that dice are trying to combat in the next series of updates for the game.


Characters

The game looks fantastic and I can still say this after 800 hours of playing time. The multiplayer is something to be amazed by as there are a selection of beautiful maps with 64 player combats. There is a selection of vehicles to choose from, including Tanks, Helicopters and Boats, which all help to perfect the gameplay and make the multiplayer really stand out from its competitors. Battlefield is a very tactical game and you will find that team work is essential to the way the multiplayer works and teams are rewarded for working together to take over objectives. The multiplayer also offers many different weapons ranging from assault rifles to snipers and then there is the class system. This involves players playing as different roles within their squad i.e. and engineer or medic. Each class has its own sets of gadgets and weapons which can help out the team and achieve the overall teamwork finish.

The multiplayer does fall short in some areas however. The map design is something to be desired as many of the maps feel as though they haven’t been thought through very well and can often lead to very linear battles that do not include teamwork but two teams battling in one area pushing each other back and forth. Another problem comes with the net code and rubber banding where many shots that a player fires do not actually hit the enemy despite being on target and many players reported being killed behind cover as plyers are in two different places on each other’s screens. DICE and EA have come under heavy criticism for this issue as many gamers say that the game was rushed so it could be released on launch day.


There were many DLC’s released to try and help boost sales. There were eventually five DLC’s that included new maps, challenges and weapons that can be used. This was a good idea as EA released a Battlefield 4 premium pass that allowed for players to get access to all 5 DLC and excusive content for a cheaper price. This proved very popular as the DLC’s alone would have cost over £100 to buy.
Since the games release in 2013, the price has dropped quite significantly in stores. This was due partly to the heavy criticism on release but also due to the down figures on the previous title battlefield 3, which was an unprecedented success.

It’s a shame then really that such a strong release can fall short of expectations despite updates and many DLC’s that were added at a later stage. The sequel however, Battlefield Hardline, was an even bigger flump in the battlefield franchise and had many hard-core battlefield fans shy away from the franchise for a good few years. I would say overall though that battlefield 4 is a good game for the casual eye and somebody who wants to jump into a world and play with guns but for the serious battlefield fan or hardcore gamer, this game falls short on a lot of necessary things that make a game truly great. I would say that the game looks good visually despite the awful loading times but really falls down in the singleplayer campaign and the bugs of the multiplayer. It is a disappointment to many battlefield fans as this game had such high hopes but fun can be had and even battlefield 4 can produce those “only in Battlefield moments”.




Graphics: 8/10: “on a high setting, the graphics are simply amazing for this game and the levolutions make for an awesome spectacle when in gameplay. It does not get higher than an 8 out of 10 as there are often a lot of bugs with the visuals.”
Gameplay: 5/10: “the gameplay is really something that lets this battlefield title down. From the truly awful campaign to the bugs and problems with the net code and balancing issues online it is a real shame that this game didn’t perform in this area.”
Controls: 7/10: “the control mapping is rather average for this type of game. There are some better games and some worse but in terms of default mappings, it favours controller mappings over keyboard mappings as often a lot of the main keys used for different things has you trying to reach form one side of the keyboard to another.”
User Interface: 8/10: “I would say that this is where the game really shines and the UI is smart, contemporary and easy to understand. It is often really easy to navigate and gives the game an overall user friendly sort of feel, targeting at more of the casual gamer who can jump in and understand the menu’s”
Lifetime: 6/10: “Personally I have played this game for around 800 hours since the games release. I have also played it on multiple consoles and pc. From my experiences the game is actually quite addictive after a while and most of the time you find yourself playing for the few “only in battlefield” moments which will keep you going through the bugs and glitches”
Overall: 5/10: “I think that overall the game is let down in several ways from the net code to the bad single player campaign. It is good for casual gamers who just want to pick up the controller and start paying but will continue to disappoint the more serious battlefield fan boys who have played the battlefield series and will be able to pick out small little details about the game.”