Diary 2018-10-24
This week is going to be in diary format because I don't want to do project format.
Ugh. Steam is a nightmare, GoG has its own problems, I have trouble remembering Itch and Humble. I want to try and make a game happen, as some kind of catharsis; it might end up on Itch.
I'm going to try and do some pre-planning, make sure I understand what I'm trying to do up-front. My inclination is to try to do something text-based, without a lot of reading required at any one time. I want to make as much of it as I can using Ink. If I end up severely exceeding Ink + Cog, I'll try to prototype something in Python, then attempt to move to Rust.
Instead of the kind of big loops I have in mind for MonFree, I want to try to work out a nice little gameplay loop, then elaborate on it. Something with dungeon-diving. Exactly how much Oregon Trail can you put in a vaguely Diablo-inspired game before it gets obnxious? Or vice-versa?
What I'm basically thinking is, I want to start from a vague aspiration, and a tiny subset that I think I can implement, then iterate on it. So, the vision is "somewhere between Oregon Trail with magic, and Diablo-likes with hunger". I don't want to do combat to start with, because I think too hard about that, so I think my starting point should be "trip planning simulator".
Basically, the first iteration is:
- The player is given a task to transport goods between two cities.
- They have a wagon.
- They have to stock up on supplies.
- Supplies include rations, weapons, and replacement parts.
- They have several "turns", which are a day each, and currently don't have much happening.
I have some ideas for what to add:
- Hunting
- Random events
- Magic
- More locations
- Loans
- Having to buy your wagon to start with
- Dungeons
- Arbitrage
- Curses
One thing I need to work out is, when the scale is bigger than a single journey, what's the organizational conceit? I guess I hope that journeys can be a decent way of organizing things, even if there are many.