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#and the fact the game itself has a ton of bugs and lacks good gameplay makes it clear that they prioritized antisemiticcaricatures
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You know what, after a certain point, you can’t separate art from the artist anymore if their “art” is a poorly slapped together mouthpiece for blatant, heinous bigotry.
ESPECIALLY if they continue to profit off of this “art”, funding legislation that actively works to oppress and further stoke hatred against marginalized groups.
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maxismatchccworld · 4 years
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Welcome back to our latest - and last! - Deep Dive into the gameplay of The Sims 4 Nifty Knitting Stuff Pack. I’ve really enjoyed sharing the designs and development of this pack with you, and I hope to continue doing these sorts of posts in the future. It’s been a super cool experience, and I hope you’ve enjoyed reading these! In today’s post I’ll talk about the feature that is core to everything in this pack, Knitting! Once again, I have to remind you that we’re still in active development on the pack and so some things may change between now and the final game. Now, let’s talk about some nifty knits!
READ IT I PROMISE YOU GONNA LIKE IT!
In order to start knitting, you’ll need to purchase a Yarn Basket from the Build/Buy catalog. You probably remember voting on these baskets a while back. This was the winning design, presented to you now in all its colorful glory! Don’t like color? That’s okay, because we included a solid black and white variant.
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We have one more knitting basket coming too! Remember this one?
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The basket acts as the crafting catalyst(neat term, huh?) similar to the Easel or Woodworking Bench in The Sims 4 base game. But unlike those examples, the Yarn Basket is meant to live in a Sim’s inventory so that they can take their knitting anywhere they want to go. Knitting itself is relatively straightforward: click on the Yarn Basket in your inventory, OR, with the basket in your inventory, click on the chair you want to sit in while knitting (perhaps a rocking chair?) and select the Knit interaction. Your projects are saved to your Sim, so you can pause your progress at any time and resume later, and even juggle multiple projects at once. Starting a project costs a small amount of Simoleons for the cost of yarn, but nothing too outrageous.
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(Children can knit too!) As a Sim levels up their knitting skill they’ll have access to new patterns. They’ll start with knitting socks and beanies, but as they grow more skilled they can tackle more challenging projects like sweaters and toys for kids. But if you only want to specialize in one thing - perhaps knitted mailbox cozies? - that's fine too! Just keep knitting anything and everything, and you’ll be level 10 before you know it. Speaking of knitting skill, sometimes your skill is reflected in your knitted work, or rather your lack of skill. Knitting projects can fail, and when they fail they can get weird. But it’s all subjective, and maybe you’ll end up accidentally knitting the cutest derpy companion, or the perfectly itchy sweater. No mistakes, only happy accidents!
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(Just own it.) One of the niftiest parts of the knitting skill is unlocking the ability to Teach to Knit, where Sims sit down together and have a knitting pow-wow. We wanted this to feel special, so we got a really sweet animation for it (Thanks Haeju!). Now that you can infect other Sims with the knitting bug, no yarn ball will be safe!
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(The knitting needles aren’t finished on the Teach To Knit interaction yet, but trust me it's SUPER CUTE.) So, what can you do with all these knitting projects? Lots of stuff! Not only can knitted objects be listed on Plopsy, but you can also Donate them to charity. If you want to surprise a loved one, try Gifting a knitted object too. If you want to destroy all traces of your knitted failures, you can Frog the object and start again! If it's a particularly nice Sweater that you made, consider Adding it to Wardrobe to make it available in Create-A-Sim to all family members.
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(Everyone appreciates a nice gift!) We want Sims to be able to knit something for their whole family. Not only will Sims be able to knit Toddler Onesies, but Baby Onesies as well. So put your little grubworm in a handmade knitted outfit. I’m sure they’d thank us if they could! (And if they didn’t like it I’m sure they’d be polite about it.)
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(Here’s a sneak peek at some of the concept art for new clothing for the littlest of Sims!) It also felt like a good idea to add an Aspiration to tie this passion for knitting all together. So if you want to master the fuzzy art of knitting, consider signing your Sim up for the Lord(or Lady) of the Knits Aspiration. With yarn running through your veins, there will be no knitting mountain too hard to conquer! Master the Aspiration and you’ll be rewarded with the Sacred Knitting Knowledge trait. What does it do? Lots of stuff! What does it unlock? Something special! Am I being vague? I am! Come on guys, I can’t share all the secrets quite yet.
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As I’ve mentioned previously, we’re trying to get as much cross-pack functionality for knitting as we can. Cats can play with Yarn Baskets and Yarn Balls, there will be new Club rules for Knitting, new class electives at University, and knitting counts for Emotional Control, just to name a few. I’m hoping Knitting feels nice and snug alongside our other gameplay systems. Now let's have a chat with our lead Object Modeler, Beth Mohler! Conor: Can you tell us a little bit about what an Object Modeler does on The Sims 4? Beth: As an object modeler I spend a lot of time trying to figure out how to make objects work in The Sims 4. This is actually a very involved process, and somewhat different from the wonderful work our environment team does. We work with designers, concept artists, engineers, animators, vfx artists (basically everyone!) to make sure that Sims can use an object properly in an animation, or that all of our objects will work with each other. Once we understand the design for a new object, we will create a rig, a block model (a very generic version of the object used to help us make more of the same object in the future), and a footprint (tells us where the object can go and how Sims move around it). Once those are tested by animators and other disciplines we can model the final version, create UVs, and add textures. We also hook up and test everything in the game to make sure it all looks good. There is a lot to think about when it comes to making objects because we know players can find so many interesting ways to place and use them in game. That makes it a very fun challenge to make them work with everything else we’ve built before. Conor: What feature are you most excited to work on in Nifty Knitting Stuff? Beth: I’d say I am most excited to work on the rocking chairs! I love that we are bringing them to the game and can’t wait to see them in some cozy living rooms or on porches. Conor: What are some of the challenges you are facing working on this pack? Beth: One of the biggest challenges is ensuring that the knitting itself looks good and is fun to watch! This is a challenge given that it needs to work for everything you can create. Figuring this out takes a lot of iteration between modeling, animation, engineering, design, and art direction so that we come to a conclusion that will work the best given our time and technical constraints. Another interesting “challenge” is the fact that I crochet as a hobby myself! When you are knowledgeable about something (yarn!) in real life, working on it in the game it can sometimes be hard to separate the things you know and may expect in reality from what is possible or best within a video game. I have to make sure to keep a balance and to conceptualize how we can best convert the knitting experience into The Sims 4. As someone who also generally enjoys interior design and architecture, this is actually one of my favorite challenges and one of the things I love about working on objects in The Sims 4. Conor: What is your favorite feature you have ever worked on in The Sims 4? Beth: I think it has to be a tie between the mini fridge or the robotics table in Discover University. That pack was the first time I got to really take an entire feature from start to finish. I’ve been with Maxis for a while, but I’m relatively new to The Sims 4. Both of these objects had some complex features we wanted that required a lot of iteration. I learned a ton about the technical aspects of our game during the process as well. I’ve also worked on a few very cool things between then and now, but those can’t be shared yet ; ) As a fan of The Sims since the very beginning I am so happy to be able to share a little about what I do on a daily basis on The Sims 4 with you! I haven’t been on The Sims 4 for quite as long overall, but some of you may also recognize me from my time on Sims Mobile where I shared some of our workflows on Twitter for making a juice bar. Thanks! Conor: You shared a screenshot of the In-Progress Rocking Chair in our Rocking Chair Deep Dive. Can you share an updated screenshot now that the Rocking Chair is further along? Beth: I would love to! I hope everyone has been enjoying seeing the progress on this object so far! Here it is a little further along. This program allows us to set the rules for the object materials, footprint size and rig it should use, as well as all the color variants and swatch colors you see in the catalog.
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Thanks Beth! By the way, Beth is on Twitter @SimGuruBeth, so be sure to Follow her! And thanks to all of you Simmers for following this pack’s development, this has been a really fun project in a very crazy time. A big thank you to my Stuff Pack teammates, and especially SimGuruSarah who edited my inane ramblings and wrangled the miscellaneous bits for these posts. While this concludes my design Deep Dives, we still have more forum posts with development insights on the way! Keep checking the Community Stuff Pack forum and we’ll have more fun stuff to show off in the weeks to come. Until next time, SimGuruConor
Source: The Sims Forum
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thesims4blogger · 4 years
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The Sims 4 Nifty Knitting: Knitting Deep Dive
SimGuruConnor has released a forum post providing details on The Sims 4 Nifty Knitting!
Welcome back to our latest – and last! – Deep Dive into the gameplay of The Sims 4 Nifty Knitting Stuff Pack. I’ve really enjoyed sharing the designs and development of this pack with you, and I hope to continue doing these sorts of posts in the future. It’s been a super cool experience, and I hope you’ve enjoyed reading these!
In today’s post I’ll talk about the feature that is core to everything in this pack, Knitting! Once again, I have to remind you that we’re still in active development on the pack and so some things may change between now and the final game.
Now, let’s talk about some nifty knits!
In order to start knitting, you’ll need to purchase a Yarn Basket from the Build/Buy catalog. You probably remember voting on these baskets a while back. This was the winning design, presented to you now in all its colorful glory! Don’t like color? That’s okay, because we included a solid black and white variant.
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We have one more knitting basket coming too! Remember this one?
Tumblr media
The basket acts as the crafting catalyst(neat term, huh?) similar to the Easel or Woodworking Bench in The Sims 4 base game. But unlike those examples, the Yarn Basket is meant to live in a Sim’s inventory so that they can take their knitting anywhere they want to go. Knitting itself is relatively straightforward: click on the Yarn Basket in your inventory, OR, with the basket in your inventory, click on the chair you want to sit in while knitting (perhaps a rocking chair?) and select the Knit interaction.
Your projects are saved to your Sim, so you can pause your progress at any time and resume later, and even juggle multiple projects at once. Starting a project costs a small amount of Simoleons for the cost of yarn, but nothing too outrageous.
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(Children can knit too!)
As a Sim levels up their knitting skill they’ll have access to new patterns. They’ll start with knitting socks and beanies, but as they grow more skilled they can tackle more challenging projects like sweaters and toys for kids. But if you only want to specialize in one thing – perhaps knitted mailbox cozies? – that’s fine too! Just keep knitting anything and everything, and you’ll be level 10 before you know it.
Speaking of knitting skill, sometimes your skill is reflected in your knitted work, or rather your lack of skill. Knitting projects can fail, and when they fail they can get weird. But it’s all subjective, and maybe you’ll end up accidentally knitting the cutest derpy companion, or the perfectly itchy sweater. No mistakes, only happy accidents!
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(Just own it.)
One of the niftiest parts of the knitting skill is unlocking the ability to Teach to Knit, where Sims sit down together and have a knitting pow-wow. We wanted this to feel special, so we got a really sweet animation for it (Thanks Haeju!). Now that you can infect other Sims with the knitting bug, no yarn ball will be safe!
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(The knitting needles aren’t finished on the Teach To Knit interaction yet, but trust me it’s SUPER CUTE.)
So, what can you do with all these knitting projects? Lots of stuff!
Not only can knitted objects be listed on Plopsy, but you can also Donate them to charity. If you want to surprise a loved one, try Gifting a knitted object too. If you want to destroy all traces of your knitted failures, you can Frog the object and start again! If it’s a particularly nice Sweater that you made, consider Adding it to Wardrobe to make it available in Create-A-Sim to all family members.
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(Everyone appreciates a nice gift!)
We want Sims to be able to knit something for their whole family. Not only will Sims be able to knit Toddler Onesies, but Baby Onesies as well. So put your little grubworm in a handmade knitted outfit. I’m sure they’d thank us if they could! (And if they didn’t like it I’m sure they’d be polite about it.)
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(Here’s a sneak peek at some of the concept art for new clothing for the littlest of Sims!)
It also felt like a good idea to add an Aspiration to tie this passion for knitting all together. So if you want to master the fuzzy art of knitting, consider signing your Sim up for the Lord(or Lady) of the Knits Aspiration. With yarn running through your veins, there will be no knitting mountain too hard to conquer! Master the Aspiration and you’ll be rewarded with the Sacred Knitting Knowledge trait. What does it do? Lots of stuff! What does it unlock? Something special! Am I being vague? I am! Come on guys, I can’t share all the secrets quite yet.
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As I’ve mentioned previously, we’re trying to get as much cross-pack functionality for knitting as we can. Cats can play with Yarn Baskets and Yarn Balls, there will be new Club rules for Knitting, new class electives at University, and knitting counts for Emotional Control, just to name a few. I’m hoping Knitting feels nice and snug alongside our other gameplay systems.
Now let’s have a chat with our lead Object Modeler, Beth Mohler!
Conor: Can you tell us a little bit about what an Object Modeler does on The Sims 4?
Beth: As an object modeler I spend a lot of time trying to figure out how to make objects work in The Sims 4. This is actually a very involved process, and somewhat different from the wonderful work our environment team does. We work with designers, concept artists, engineers, animators, vfx artists (basically everyone!) to make sure that Sims can use an object properly in an animation, or that all of our objects will work with each other. Once we understand the design for a new object, we will create a rig, a block model (a very generic version of the object used to help us make more of the same object in the future), and a footprint (tells us where the object can go and how Sims move around it). Once those are tested by animators and other disciplines we can model the final version, create UVs, and add textures. We also hook up and test everything in the game to make sure it all looks good. There is a lot to think about when it comes to making objects because we know players can find so many interesting ways to place and use them in game. That makes it a very fun challenge to make them work with everything else we’ve built before.
Conor: What feature are you most excited to work on in Nifty Knitting Stuff?
Beth: I’d say I am most excited to work on the rocking chairs! I love that we are bringing them to the game and can’t wait to see them in some cozy living rooms or on porches.
Conor: What are some of the challenges you are facing working on this pack?
Beth: One of the biggest challenges is ensuring that the knitting itself looks good and is fun to watch! This is a challenge given that it needs to work for everything you can create. Figuring this out takes a lot of iteration between modeling, animation, engineering, design, and art direction so that we come to a conclusion that will work the best given our time and technical constraints.
Another interesting “challenge” is the fact that I crochet as a hobby myself! When you are knowledgeable about something (yarn!) in real life, working on it in the game it can sometimes be hard to separate the things you know and may expect in reality from what is possible or best within a video game. I have to make sure to keep a balance and to conceptualize how we can best convert the knitting experience into The Sims 4. As someone who also generally enjoys interior design and architecture, this is actually one of my favorite challenges and one of the things I love about working on objects in The Sims 4.
Conor: What is your favorite feature you have ever worked on in The Sims 4?
Beth: I think it has to be a tie between the mini fridge or the robotics table in Discover University. That pack was the first time I got to really take an entire feature from start to finish. I’ve been with Maxis for a while, but I’m relatively new to The Sims 4. Both of these objects had some complex features we wanted that required a lot of iteration. I learned a ton about the technical aspects of our game during the process as well. I’ve also worked on a few very cool things between then and now, but those can’t be shared yet ; )
As a fan of The Sims since the very beginning I am so happy to be able to share a little about what I do on a daily basis on The Sims 4 with you! I haven’t been on The Sims 4 for quite as long overall, but some of you may also recognize me from my time on Sims Mobile where I shared some of our workflows on Twitter for making a juice bar. Thanks!
Conor: You shared a screenshot of the In-Progress Rocking Chair in our Rocking Chair Deep Dive. Can you share an updated screenshot now that the Rocking Chair is further along?
Beth: I would love to! I hope everyone has been enjoying seeing the progress on this object so far! Here it is a little further along. This program allows us to set the rules for the object materials, footprint size and rig it should use, as well as all the color variants and swatch colors you see in the catalog.
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Thanks Beth! By the way, Beth is on Twitter @SimGuruBeth, so be sure to Follow her! And thanks to all of you Simmers for following this pack’s development, this has been a really fun project in a very crazy time. A big thank you to my Stuff Pack teammates, and especially SimGuruSarah who edited my inane ramblings and wrangled the miscellaneous bits for these posts.
While this concludes my design Deep Dives, we still have more forum posts with development insights on the way! Keep checking the Community Stuff Pack forum and we’ll have more fun stuff to show off in the weeks to come.
Until next time, SimGuruConor
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lemonadeflashbang · 3 years
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Moonlighter Thoughts/Review
This is a game I finished just last week- and the last game I played. I’ve got kind of a weird relationship with this one. First, a quick note, I played the Switch version which I believe comes with some DLC. Moonlighter’s a game that I think a lot of people would enjoy, but I don’t think would be anyone’s favorite game. It’s the kind of game that would rule Rotten Tomatoes, but maybe fall apart when given an IMDB score. Moonlighter’s an RPG where you traverse procedurally generated dungeons to gather loot and take back to your shop, where you later sell them for cash. You play the role of adventurer and shopkeeper all in one, which is a neat take on the dungeon diver formula. First, let me get through the things I liked. The art and presentation are solid. There’s very little story, and it pretty much just gets to the point and lets you play the game. The level design didn’t fall apart at the end, and in fact the DLC postgame dungeon is one of my favorites of the bunch. The core gameplay of entering a dungeon and fighting stuff for loot just kind of works. It’s a tried and true formula that just feels good. It also feels good to sell stuff and just get rich, and the game encourages you to sell as much as possible. But the combat can be pretty shallow. Every weapon has two moves- an attack and a special. Many weapons have a basic attack combo. You have a dodge roll. And that’s it. That’s all the combat mechanics. You can switch between two weapons inside of a dungeon, so that can give you some additional move options but the general combat feel is basic. You learn some simple enemy patterns, dodge the right moves, and attack. Enemies are simple enough that it doesn’t take long before any individual enemy is a nonissue and that’s kind of the end of that. So while it’s fun to collect cool things, the combat itself is really pretty barebones. There’s little to master, and little to make repeat playthroughs interesting. Because it’s so expensive to upgrade additional weapons, you can feel locked in to your first weapon choices and there’s little incentive to mess around. The shopkeeping also doesn’t feel that great either. You place items on display at a set price, gauge customer reactions to your prices, then collect your cash if they buy them. There’s little in the way of mastery, and once you’ve figured out where an item price “should be” there’s little to actually do but sit around and wait. As you upgrade your shop, thieves might enter and try to steal your items or from the register directly. Sometimes everything just stops because a bird flew in and the customers panic, until you catch it. These mini events are kind of cute, but more annoying than engaging or skillful. They can help break up the monotony of sitting around and waiting, but not in a way that feels particularly great. In addition, that bird event can sometimes trap an NPC between states- they see the bird mid-action and just don’t know what to do after. I had to reset the game twice in one sitting due to these kinds of shop bugs that prevented you from closing or exiting your shop. They just trapped you in there, unable to go to sleep and save or leave... forever. Speaking of bugs, the game is a bit buggy. You can sometimes roll through doorways and end up outside the map, or not trigger the location change, get trapped in your own shop, etc., It can be disappointing when this forces a reset, but the bugs are usually harmless. But what we’ve ended up with a game that has an addictive core loop and a fair bit of content, but the execution just feels shallow and minimalistic. Progression is mostly tied to your equipment power as well, the easiest way to advance is to upgrade a weapon. Armor can be useful after that, but can feel pretty optional when you’re just one or two shotting most enemies to begin with. It’s a neat loop, but there’s essentially no replay value or desire to go back into a dungeon after completing it since you now just kind of smoke everything. You upgrade equipment via a combination of items and gold. You can buy the items at a hefty markup, but most of the time the items will come from the current dungeon. This leads to a pattern where you hoard necessary resources until you can drop a weapon upgrade, and then now that you can suddenly afford to sell those rarer weapon upgrade items you’ll find yourself rolling in cash and completing the dungeon in 2-3 more runs because you’ve opened up an additional revenue stream and can more easily venture deeper where the good loot is. That kind of opening has some weird effects in terms of upgrades for your shop. You’ll eventually hit a point where money for everything but the fanciest upgrades is mostly just a joke, because the exponentially scaling gold returns from the dungeon outpace almost everything there is to buy to begin with. There’s a couple other mechanics that maybe weren’t super well thought out. You can buy access to a banker for an exorbitant amount and after completing a couple dungeons, who will allow you to invest some money on a Sunday and then cash it out on any day in the following week. Neat mechanic, except you can only invest once per week. There’s a time cycle for whatever reason, but locking up your money for a week is always a terrible idea. You either need the money for an upgrade, or you’re about to complete the dungeon level you’re at and that amount of money will be literally worthless once the new income levels at the next dungeon are established. And by the time you’re likely to get around to purchasing them, the game’s mostly over anyway. It’s a mechanic that’s neat on paper, but doesn’t fit the actual game’s pacing. It doesn’t really open up any new or interesting gameplay or decision making. It’s just kind of a non choice that makes itself hard to actually interact with anyway. And speaking of weird mechanics, the DLC introduces a slew of special materials you can only get through haggling. It also introduces haggling. The thing is, all of the new DLC scaled armor requires the same few resources- meaning they’re super valuable and hard to get. Meanwhile, your weapon trees only need a few depending on their line. So you end up needing a whole ton of some special stones / cloth because you need it everywhere and then maybe just... a little of this and that for the rest of the build. You end up finishing your weapons quickly while way behind in your armor, a fact that doesn’t matter because your armor doesn’t matter much. You end up with so much health you can basically face tank the final boss without anywhere near max HP, just relying on your fat health bar and potions to heal you. Why not give the body armor one set of items, the headpiece another, the boots another, etc.,? A whole bunch of new materials were introduced and almost none of them will actually matter to your experience, and they’re all locked behind a haggling system which... doesn’t offer any exciting gameplay either. You’ll learn a rule of thumb for haggling that always seems to work and that’ll be it. What I’d like to see from any future projects is a more polished game design- making sure that the systems you have in place really fit and enhance the game. I’d also like to see some deeper combat. I don’t care if there’s six weapons if they’re all shallow and if it’s hard to actually use and upgrade all six at once. It doesn’t have to be combat depth but depth in any of the game systems, which was lacking. Moonlighter is a lengthy, fun, but ultimately shallow experience. I enjoyed it, and it’s worth a play, but it falls short of greatness due to its weaker systems design. Which is a shame, because the potential really was there for something special. Pick it up if you’re looking for a fun turn your brain off kind of game and have a dozen or two hours you want to burn.
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