Crystal’s First Turkey
Crystal made her first turkey yesterday for Thanksgiving. It came out really great!
Posted from WordPress for Windows Phone
Crystal made her first turkey yesterday for Thanksgiving. It came out really great!
Posted from WordPress for Windows Phone
My students completed their mid-term map projects a few weeks ago and I’ve been wanting to update on the progress of the course. Everyone was required to recreate the map that is outlined for design in Half-Life 2 Mods for Dummies. I felt this was an important exercise for the class because it gave everyone familiarity with the tools and they all had a common goal that they could assist each other with if they needed to. It worked out well. The grades for this assignment were very high and I couldn’t have been more happy.
I selected the work of one of my students to share with the Internet as a representation of the map we completed in class. Andrew Ross is one of the student developers in my class who I felt demonstrated a near perfect submission. If you are interested in playing the map we completed you can download it here: Andrew Ross’ Mid-Term Map Submission
If you have any comments of feedback on the map feel free to leave it here. Also if you’d like to learn how to develop the map yourself, purchase a copy of the book here.
At the conclusion of the project we were lucky enough to have the map’s designer and our textbook author, Erik Guilfoyle come and guest lecture. He talked to our class about the game development industry and what it is like to work within it. The students really enjoyed his talk and found it to be extremely informative.
Our class is now elbow deep in the development of their final projects. I will post about that and more at the completetion of the semester. Until then…
It is Sept 19th. Intro. to Game Design has entered its 3rd week. You’re probably wondering how everything has been going. Let’s recap:
We started class on Sept. 7th. I was surprised to see that all of my students had laptops so that was a big relief for me as I was worried about the prospect of running my class’ hands-on lessons in Rider’s CIS Lab.
I have a mix of students in the class; hardcore gamers, casual gamers, & people who aren’t gamers. So far their attitudes about the course have been enthusiastic.
The capstone assignment for my course is for a student to design from scratch their own map in any of the Valve Source games we’ll be touching upon in class (Portal, HL2:DM, TF2, L4D, etc.). One student already approached me with his idea for the class and I must say I am very impressed with the vision this student has demonstrated in this short amount of time. I look forward to seeing his finished project.
We spent the first three week’s in Phil Co’s book to give the students a baseline about game development terminology and a high level overview of what game design entails. Today we started with the hands on exercises in Dummies to get them familiar with using Source SDK. We’ll see how it goes but I have high hopes thus far.
On the subject of teaching game design, Valve Corporation has rolled out its new initiative, Learning with Portals. Its nice to see that I am a little ahead of the curve on using Source SDK in class. I hope that it gets more widely adopted at both the collegiate and elementary/high school level.
I will report back in a few weeks to discuss our progress with the more advanced Source SDK techniques that the students will be learning soon.
Till then…
So if you have been a longtime fan of my site you’ll probably remember that I used to write about Palm phones all the time. Consulting with my archives shows however that I have not written about my personal smartphone use since August 1, 2005 when my Kyocera 7135 finally kicked the bucket. I honestly haven’t loved a phone as much since my old 7135. There were things it did that most cell phones today still don’t do. The old Palm OS was a great smartphone solution for many years but with the introduction of the iPhone it started showing its age. I still stayed true to Palm though because I was on Verizon. I had a Treo 650 & finally a Treo 755p. The 755p was my favorite of the Treos but it still didn’t compare with the 7135.