Game Ideas
• Side scrolling
• Platformer (cup head)
• Combat
• Which platform?
• Vs other players? Multiplayer, combat game. Jetpacks? Comedy
catchphrase?
• Pinball sort of game?
• You are monster consuming people? Werewolf? You start off running from
creature then end up infected and have to infect others?
• Maybe one player starts as the monster and the others have hunt it down.
Hide and seek sort of game.
Monster,hide and seek, multiplayer
• What if one player has unlimited sight and the other players can see
the only part of the map. This would be hunters and the hunted. The
partially sighted have powers, freeze the hunter. Survive the time limit
and the hunted(humans) win.
Multiplayer vs game
• 4 players
• Vs free for all
• Side on side scroll
•
Jousting
• Side scroll
• Two players attack each other with joust
• Two rocket ships?
Game
I like the idea of a series of bosses rather than actual side
scrolling levels. Creative bosses that are completely
different to one another.
What if you fight off a number of movie and TV characters.
You could have bosses of Rick Sanchez, Bojack Horseman,
Bob’s Burgers, Archer. John Rain
Maybe just animated characters?
Could have knockoff characters?
Each has very different abilities. Teleportation, throwing
different projectiles, has very different weaknesses.
You’re a person dealing with mental issues each manifests
itself as a different enemy. Each has to be overcome. This is
not revealed?
Different art style on each level
You’re an avid TV and movie watcher who has fallen asleep
watching TV and you are now playing in the dreams and you
will have to use your knowledge of the shows in order to
defeat the bosses.
Animated
Game
• Battle through the ages: amebae, dino, caveman, roman extra
• Stuck in a child's imagination, fighting off things from a kids
imagination.
Hat=weakness
Product research
• My game is a side scrolling action game and I will therefore be
researching: Cuphead, Shovel Knight, Megaman, The Binding of Isaac:
Rebirth.
Cuphead
• This is a 2-d side scrolling run and gun.
• It has the art style of old animated films, such as Disney and has a very 30s style to it.
• Bosses are the central spectacle here – ultra-paced, wonderfully designed, concentrated encounters
that punctuate its run-time (Sam White. (2017). Cuphead review: come for the 1930s visuals, stay for the hard-earned thrills. Available: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/oct/09/cuphead-review-
game-visuals-thrills-1930s-animation. Last accessed 20th Jan 2018.)
• From what I have seen of this game I love the idea of varied bosses that take many tries to work out
how to defeat. I do however think I will go for a different art style to fit better my game.
• With no health bar for enemies and no sense of visual feedback, though, there’s no way to no how far
you are from victory in any given fight. This seems like a misstep that serves the beautiful art style but
can, at times, feel needlessly obtuse from a gameplay perspective. (Sam White. (2017). Cuphead review: come for the 1930s
visuals, stay for the hard-earned thrills. Available: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/oct/09/cuphead-review-game-visuals-thrills-1930s-animation.
Last accessed 20th Jan 2018.)
• I think in my game I will not have a health bar but rather visual clues that the boss is becoming weaker, I
feel like this gives a good indication of how well a player is doing without unnecessarily filling the screen
with graphics. This will help create a more immersive and cinematic game.
Shovel Knight
• I really enjoy the art style of shovel knight and feel as though it is
one that I can hopefully emulate.
• I also like the idea of stats kept neatly at the top of the screen so
they do not clutter the screen.
• The gaming industry is attached to an invisible pendulum. In recent
years, that pendulum has noticeably swung towards an
appreciation of the old school, with pixel art, gruelling difficulty, and
seemingly ancient ideas made new again. Colin Moriarty. (2014). Shovel Knight Review. Available:
http://uk.ign.com/articles/2014/06/26/shovel-knight-review. Last accessed 21st Jan 2018
• I hope to use a resurgence in these ideas to help create my game. It
shows the idea of pixel art can work in modern gaming.
• What I like again about this game is the way every game has a
specific design and theme. Leading to a variety of gameplay and
making sure the game aesthetics never get old.
Megaman
• This was one of the first game franchises to have every
level have a different theme and a boss to fit this theme.
It also put a lot of emphasis on its boss battles, many of
them taking more than one try to defeat.
• This originally story spins the yarn that Dr Light created
six master robots for industrial purposes: Cutman,
Gutsman, Elecman, Iceman, Fireman and
Bombman. Darren Calvert. (2007). Review: Mega Man (NES). Available: http://www.nintendolife.com/reviews/vc/mega_man_nes. Last
accessed 21st Jan 2018.
• As you can see by the master robot names they have
very specific and simple themes, not only for
themselves but the level that they are in.
The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth
• What I like about this game is not only its
difficulty but the way in which each different
time you play it, it is randomly generated and so
infinitely replay able even when you continue to
fail.
• brutal bullet-hell difficulty isn’t a punishment,
but an opportunity to see something totally
new.DAN STAPLETON. (2014). THE BINDING OF ISAAC: REBIRTH REVIEW.Available: http://uk.ign.com/articles/2014/11/26/the-binding-
of-isaac-rebirth-review. Last accessed 22nd Jul 2018
• This is the kind of feeling that I want to create in
my game. I want it to feel difficult but only so
that it is rewarding when you win. I am also
going to use some randomisation so that each
retry is slightly different.
Proposal

Video game plan

  • 1.
  • 2.
    • Side scrolling •Platformer (cup head) • Combat • Which platform? • Vs other players? Multiplayer, combat game. Jetpacks? Comedy catchphrase? • Pinball sort of game? • You are monster consuming people? Werewolf? You start off running from creature then end up infected and have to infect others? • Maybe one player starts as the monster and the others have hunt it down. Hide and seek sort of game.
  • 3.
    Monster,hide and seek,multiplayer • What if one player has unlimited sight and the other players can see the only part of the map. This would be hunters and the hunted. The partially sighted have powers, freeze the hunter. Survive the time limit and the hunted(humans) win.
  • 4.
    Multiplayer vs game •4 players • Vs free for all • Side on side scroll •
  • 6.
    Jousting • Side scroll •Two players attack each other with joust • Two rocket ships?
  • 7.
    Game I like theidea of a series of bosses rather than actual side scrolling levels. Creative bosses that are completely different to one another. What if you fight off a number of movie and TV characters. You could have bosses of Rick Sanchez, Bojack Horseman, Bob’s Burgers, Archer. John Rain Maybe just animated characters? Could have knockoff characters? Each has very different abilities. Teleportation, throwing different projectiles, has very different weaknesses. You’re a person dealing with mental issues each manifests itself as a different enemy. Each has to be overcome. This is not revealed? Different art style on each level You’re an avid TV and movie watcher who has fallen asleep watching TV and you are now playing in the dreams and you will have to use your knowledge of the shows in order to defeat the bosses.
  • 8.
  • 9.
    Game • Battle throughthe ages: amebae, dino, caveman, roman extra • Stuck in a child's imagination, fighting off things from a kids imagination.
  • 10.
  • 12.
    Product research • Mygame is a side scrolling action game and I will therefore be researching: Cuphead, Shovel Knight, Megaman, The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth.
  • 13.
    Cuphead • This isa 2-d side scrolling run and gun. • It has the art style of old animated films, such as Disney and has a very 30s style to it. • Bosses are the central spectacle here – ultra-paced, wonderfully designed, concentrated encounters that punctuate its run-time (Sam White. (2017). Cuphead review: come for the 1930s visuals, stay for the hard-earned thrills. Available: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/oct/09/cuphead-review- game-visuals-thrills-1930s-animation. Last accessed 20th Jan 2018.) • From what I have seen of this game I love the idea of varied bosses that take many tries to work out how to defeat. I do however think I will go for a different art style to fit better my game. • With no health bar for enemies and no sense of visual feedback, though, there’s no way to no how far you are from victory in any given fight. This seems like a misstep that serves the beautiful art style but can, at times, feel needlessly obtuse from a gameplay perspective. (Sam White. (2017). Cuphead review: come for the 1930s visuals, stay for the hard-earned thrills. Available: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/oct/09/cuphead-review-game-visuals-thrills-1930s-animation. Last accessed 20th Jan 2018.) • I think in my game I will not have a health bar but rather visual clues that the boss is becoming weaker, I feel like this gives a good indication of how well a player is doing without unnecessarily filling the screen with graphics. This will help create a more immersive and cinematic game.
  • 14.
    Shovel Knight • Ireally enjoy the art style of shovel knight and feel as though it is one that I can hopefully emulate. • I also like the idea of stats kept neatly at the top of the screen so they do not clutter the screen. • The gaming industry is attached to an invisible pendulum. In recent years, that pendulum has noticeably swung towards an appreciation of the old school, with pixel art, gruelling difficulty, and seemingly ancient ideas made new again. Colin Moriarty. (2014). Shovel Knight Review. Available: http://uk.ign.com/articles/2014/06/26/shovel-knight-review. Last accessed 21st Jan 2018 • I hope to use a resurgence in these ideas to help create my game. It shows the idea of pixel art can work in modern gaming. • What I like again about this game is the way every game has a specific design and theme. Leading to a variety of gameplay and making sure the game aesthetics never get old.
  • 15.
    Megaman • This wasone of the first game franchises to have every level have a different theme and a boss to fit this theme. It also put a lot of emphasis on its boss battles, many of them taking more than one try to defeat. • This originally story spins the yarn that Dr Light created six master robots for industrial purposes: Cutman, Gutsman, Elecman, Iceman, Fireman and Bombman. Darren Calvert. (2007). Review: Mega Man (NES). Available: http://www.nintendolife.com/reviews/vc/mega_man_nes. Last accessed 21st Jan 2018. • As you can see by the master robot names they have very specific and simple themes, not only for themselves but the level that they are in.
  • 16.
    The Binding ofIsaac: Rebirth • What I like about this game is not only its difficulty but the way in which each different time you play it, it is randomly generated and so infinitely replay able even when you continue to fail. • brutal bullet-hell difficulty isn’t a punishment, but an opportunity to see something totally new.DAN STAPLETON. (2014). THE BINDING OF ISAAC: REBIRTH REVIEW.Available: http://uk.ign.com/articles/2014/11/26/the-binding- of-isaac-rebirth-review. Last accessed 22nd Jul 2018 • This is the kind of feeling that I want to create in my game. I want it to feel difficult but only so that it is rewarding when you win. I am also going to use some randomisation so that each retry is slightly different.
  • 17.