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LGP Announces Game Development Team

Ronald Hymer writes "Linuxlookup.com is reporting Linux Game Publishing has announced the Linux Game Development Project team. The eight winners of LGP's game development company initiative were announced last evening and Linuxlookup's very own resident programmer Matt Wilson was granted one of the eight positions on the team. Along with project information, they link submitted code samples along with the team member URL's." See our previous story about this. Hey team: no penguins in your game, okay?

15 of 216 comments (clear)

  1. Good Luck by FortKnox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good luck competing in todays PC gaming market (hope you have the cash to buy a good game engine instead of taking the time to make one from scratch).
    Remember, graphics and wizbangs are what makes the sale, but plot and fun is what makes a game outlast time.

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    1. Re:Good Luck by blitzoid · · Score: 5, Informative

      There are some good game engines out there that are cheap.

      For instance, Torque, the engine Tribes 2 is based on, is available for $100 dollars. And in addition to that, you can test it out a bit beforehand. It works with Windows, Mac, and Linux. Not every game engine costs several hundred thousand dollars.

      And last time I checked, Tribes 2 didn't look too amateurish or cheaply made.

      --
      I am a filthy pirate.
    2. Re:Good Luck by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but plot and fun is what makes a game outlast time.

      Wow, I still have my 21 year old Ms. Pacman machine. There's no plot. There's no graphics. Yet it somehow stands the test of time (also the fact that they recently re-released it in conjunction w/another arcade classic).

  2. Well, that's a good start... by obli · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Looks like they haven't got any game to develop yet tho. Perhaps they can hook up with some other game designers and make their games more linux-friendly?

  3. Weird concept... by mschoolbus · · Score: 4, Funny

    Try to make a Linux game that doesn't reek of amateurish game play and graphics for once...

  4. Re:No game ideas yet! by dreamchaser · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Maybe we should help! Perhaps an approach similar to how we pick interview questions: take the top ten moderated ideas and send them the link!

    Of course, they may have some vague ideas already. Personally, I'd like to see something combining the storyline of a good RPG with the action of a good FPS. Open ended would be nice, something like Privateer or Freelancer but in a fantasy or military setting rather than as a space sim.

  5. Re:Cool... by Randolpho · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes! I second this wholeheartedly!!!!1!11!!!!!!

    I miss old-skool graphic adventures. Sure, go 3D if ya gotta, but stick to the gameplay similar to, say, the old Sierra *Quest series.

    And remember... Story, Graphics, Story, Gameplay, Story!

    --
    "Times have not become more violent. They have just become more televised."
    -Marilyn Manson
  6. And since they don't seem to have any game ideas by L0stb0Y · · Score: 5, Funny

    how about

    Duke Penguin
    Mortal Linuks
    Leisure Suit Linus
    Max Penguin
    Splinter Server: The M$ add-on

    Sorry.

    It's one of *those* days.

    LosT

    --
    "We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams."
  7. What really happened by arvindn · · Score: 4, Funny

    Having received only seven applications in all for the post, linuxlookup.com made up the deficit by "granting" the remaining position to one of their own programmers :)

  8. This is like the real world.. by xchino · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is the true story (true story) of eight unrelated programmers picked to work on a Linux project and have their code made open. This is what happens when programmers stop being nice, and start being real.

    Seriously, I could see this as being the next big reality TV series. I have no doubt that there will be some serious "static" between these people. What kind of leadership model is there going ot be? Are they just throwing them together and letting them work it out amongst themselves? I worked on a Linux game with my best friend, and we were at each others throats within a week and had to ditch the project before we killed each other.

    --
    Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
    1. Re:This is like the real world.. by Soko · · Score: 4, Funny

      Seriously, I could see this as being the next big reality TV series.

      Please, please $DIETY, make sure there's no TV execs reading this thread. PLEASE!!!! I can see it now...

      (Fade in from the final commercial...)

      Coder1: OK, so, what happened this week? Who gets voted out of the group?
      Coder3: Coder7 totally hosed our CVS tree - he should go...
      Coder7: No I didn't! Hey, Linus hisself uses BitKeeper fercryinoutloud...
      Coder4: That wasn't as bad to our chances of success as what Coder 5 did. I mean, that robot that could strip any female character naked and then turn her to stone was *lame* in the extreme.
      Coder5: Not as bad as your trap door that looked like the gotasex guy.
      Coder6: I say Coder2 goes. He's done the unthinkable.
      All: ????
      Coder6: He ported the whole project to .Net in a day and a half.
      Coder1: GAH! Heresy! Coder2 it is!"

      Soko

      --
      "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
  9. A suggestion for story by michaelggreer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the past ten years, people having been flocking to get MFAs in creative writing. There are tons of writers out there. However, it always seem like game developers think that it would be better if they wrote their own stories and scripts. Writing is not a trivial business. I mean, everyone can write, but everyone can sing too. Why not get a writer to write? I understand it becomes a matter of control, and that the developers want to put in their own birlliant anime-influenced ideas, but its like letting the programmers draw the graphics. I suggest getting a writer to write the story, and let them run the story.

  10. I just want to know by AndrewNelson · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... how I got labelled an "International Man of Mystery".

  11. Linuxlookup story plagiarised from happypenguin by bobz · · Score: 5, Informative

    The entire writeup at linuxlookup.com was lifted verbatim from my announcement at happypenguin.org. As far as I know, this team has not been announced *anywhere* yet besides happypenguin. Plagiarism sucks, guys.

  12. One possible project by Kiwi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    One project these developers can do is finish up and polish xconq, which is a GPL multi-platform real-time strategy wargame which has been in a perpetual state of being incomplete for 17 years now. The game has only two part-time developers and one of them is becoming blind; this game has a lot of promise and I would love to see it get the kind of professional polish that a team of eight programmers working on it for a year can give it.

    I much prefer an open-source game; it allows me to make tweaks and implement house rules; something a proprietary game does not allow.

    - Sam

    --

    The secret to enjoying Slashdot is to realize that it should not be taken too seriously.