In this book, veteran game developers, academics, journalists, and others provide their processes and experiences with level design. Each provides a unique perspective representing multiple steps of the process for interacting with and creating game levels – experiencing levels, designing levels, constructing levels, and testing levels. These diverse perspectives offer readers a window into the thought processes that result in memorable open game worlds, chilling horror environments, computer-generated levels, evocative soundscapes, and many other types of gamespaces. This collection invites readers into the minds of professional designers as they work and provides evergreen topics on level design and game criticism to inspire both new and veteran designers.
Key Features:
Learn about the processes of experienced developers and level designers in their own words
Discover best-practices for creating levels for persuasive play and designing collaboratively
Offers analysis methods for better understanding game worlds and how they function in response to gameplay
Find your own preferred method of level design by learning the processes of multiple industry veterans
By:
Christopher W. Totten (American University Washington DC USA)
Imprint: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Weight: 639g
ISBN: 9781032276717
ISBN 10: 1032276711
Pages: 408
Publication Date: 01 February 2022
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Chapter 1. Kamuro Nights: A Personal Retrospective of the Yakuza Series Gavin Greene Chapter 2. Cracking the Resident Evil Puzzle Box Daniel Johnson Chapter 3.From Construction to Perception: Three Views of Level Design for Story-Driven Games Huaxin Wei and Chaoguang Wang Chapter 4. Everything I Learned About Level Design at an Orlesian Ball Heidi McDonald Chapter 5. Hell, Hyboria, and Disneyland; The Origins and Inspirations of Themed Video Game Level Design Scott Rogers Chapter 6. Level Design Practices for Independent Games Fares Kayali and Josef Ortner Chapter 7. Making the Most of Audio in Characterization, Narrative Structure, and Level Design Chanel Summers Chapter 8. Procedural Content Generation: An Overview Gillian Smith Chapter 9. P.T. and the Play of Stillness Brian Upton Chapter 10. The Illusion of Choice – How to Hide the Linearity of Levels from Players Joao Raza and Benjamin Carter Chapter 11. Integrating Procedural and Handmade Level Design Dr. Mark R. Johnson Chapter 12. Level Design Planning for Open World Games Joel Burgess PART 4: TESTING LEVELS Chapter 13. Play-Personas: Mental Tools for Player-Centered Level Design Alessandro Canossa Chapter 14. Evaluating Level Design Using Public Events Jonathan Moriarty Chapter 15. The Rule of 27’s: A Comparative Analysis of 2D Screenspace and Virtual Reality Environment Design Hadar Silverman Chapter 16. Expression vs. Experience: Balancing Art and Usability Needs in Level Design Christopher W. Totten
Christopher Totten is the Game Artist in Residence at American University and the founder of independent developer Pie for Breakfast Studios. He is also the founder of the Smithsonian American Art Museum Indie Arcade and an advocate for bringing games to museums and cultural institutions. Totten is an active writer in the game industry, with articles featured in industry journals, chapters in several academic publications, and two books: Game Character Creation in Blender and Unity (Wiley 2012) and An Architectural Approach to Level Design (CRC, 2014.) He has also spoken at GDC China, Foundations Of Digital Games (FDG), East Coast Game Conference, Digital Games Research Association (DiGRA) conference, and Games For Change. He has displayed his games at MAGFest, The Smithsonian Innovation in Art event, and Baltimore Artscape, and Blank Arcade. He has a Masters Degree in Architecture from The Catholic University of America in Washington, DC.