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2/05/12 2:37:21 AM#81
Originally posted by NMStudio I hear that it is....... finally. The problem is that when BW took it, it was incomplete and worse, undocumented. Anyone that has wroked anywhere near a large (actually any) software project knows that is a recipee for unmitigated disaster. The other thing is when BW took it, it was for the development tools. Mainly because at that stage it had never been used to actually produce anything real. Turns out those didn't scale and (as you would expect with unfinished software) had issues. It is no wonder at all that BW are still fighting with it now (which it appears they are). |
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2/05/12 2:45:45 AM#82
Hero engine is a AAA engine whit extreme powerfull tools and possiblity's. its also FREEEEE , as in you can start making youre game whit their engine for free and afterwards pay a cut of the income to them. whit Hero engine you reduce startup cost by a few million and only have to put in whatever you need to pay youreself /employees. (excl design programs like Maya/max those also cost a wee bit) its a fairly ideal engine for a startup dont know what i want to do exsactly and how much i can invest type of indy developer. and considering the big guys also use the engine it gota do someting right eh ? |
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2/06/12 6:20:45 AM#83
could someone who has experiences with it tell me pls is HeroEngine supports terraforming? (wurm or xsyon style) |
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Loktofeit
Elite Member
Joined: 1/13/10
EVE in 2013 - DUST 514, CSM8, Fanfest, 10th Anniversary, Uprising, Odyssey. Gonna be a good year :) |
2/06/12 6:51:30 AM#84
Originally posted by Benedikt Can you add terraforming? Yes. Is it native to it? No.
filmoret: One thing I have never figured out is why the game devs hardly ever fix simple problems that arise. It is like they don't care about the pvp community. Nitth: What makes you so sure its a simple fix? filmoret: Because most of them are. Sometimes its just changing a number in a code string other times its creating a few variables. However none of them should take over a few hours of coding. |
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2/06/12 7:03:50 AM#85
He Kevin, I think it's an "ok" idea provided that you are fine with the risk of losing the money. What you would essentially do is start some sort of indy studio and most likely with people who are on board with your vision (or whoever is designing the game). Keep in mind that most mmo's are made for quite a bit of money so this would definitley be an indy project. My advice (and if I was doing this) would be to interview every person I could regarding what it took to make such a thing. I'm not talking about business 101 or anyting like this. But what type of people you need to get the project off the ground, which positions you essentially need, what the steps would along the way, etc. I would then slowly build a roadmap of how this project would proceed. One good way, believe it or not, is to work backwards from "finished state" to the start. Sometimes going forward allows one to get lost in a project. So you would essentially say "ok, this is the finished project, what happens right before it goes live" then "what happens before that part happens, etc. After you have your roadmap you can then figure out what resources you would need. If this is an indy project you might have people interested who already have computers but essentially you want to know how much this software is going to cost. It will partly help to know the scope of your project. So a 2d game might be easier and less costly to make than a 3D game, etc. The type of art design might be simpler, more stylized over extremely realistic art designs. Then once you have the cost (which will be a guess) with your road map, the type of people you need, you then need to speak with someone with some actual experience to get an idea of time and things that can go wrong. You might even be able to get an interview with some people working in the industry. Nothing ventured nothing gained right? "I would like to get into the mmo business as a producer, what do I need to know". Essentially know every detail about the project BEFORE you invest huge amounts of money. Have everything mapped out before you start working. You then might rethink whether or not that house is the better idea or if you want to really follow this dream. Just be prepared for loss "just in case". |
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Loktofeit
Elite Member
Joined: 1/13/10
EVE in 2013 - DUST 514, CSM8, Fanfest, 10th Anniversary, Uprising, Odyssey. Gonna be a good year :) |
2/06/12 7:19:42 AM#86
For those interested in HeroEngine-based indie MMOs, there's a blogger here that appears to be working on one: http://www.morpg.com/blogs/lynnara/122011/22323_Rebooting-on-a-New-Engine
filmoret: One thing I have never figured out is why the game devs hardly ever fix simple problems that arise. It is like they don't care about the pvp community. Nitth: What makes you so sure its a simple fix? filmoret: Because most of them are. Sometimes its just changing a number in a code string other times its creating a few variables. However none of them should take over a few hours of coding. |
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10/11/12 9:03:52 PM#87
Well on the verge of closed beta for WorldAlpha I am sub 6 figures. So it is possible.
Thanks, |
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Merilirem
Novice Member
Joined: 1/01/13
Do not fear the unknown, for it does not fear you. |
1/04/13 9:07:59 AM#88
If you have a decent idea, understanding and insight you could pull it off, though you may need at least a few million since cutting it close can lead to a good idea flopping due to falling just 50 grand short. No amount of money will ever guarantee success in this kind of thing of course, it just grant you options and time. But the whole lynchpin is whether you have a good idea and the abilities to work it out. Good ideas are what make good games, doing good ideas right is what makes great games. Above all people want to have fun, to play something that makes them look back on the experience with more than world of Warcraft sighs and the disappointment of clones. You can have the best coders and artists etc in the world working for free with all their hearts yet end up with some really well made vanilla garbage people only play until they find that game made from a good idea. Just saying money is a fairly small concern in the end. My estimate is the same as the rest in that respect.
If a butterfly learnt to speak, to live in human society, paid its bills, had a job, lived in a fancy house and married a human, is it human? Now what if that same butterfly knew how to write code better than any human and had years of experience in the game industry, would that make it a game designer? If u wouldn't let a construction worker design your house, then why let a programmer design your world? |