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Planet Moon Blazes Trail Onto PSP For Smaller Developers?

Thanks to GameSpot for its interview with Aaron Loeb of developers Planet Moon Studios, the quirky developer that "was founded in 1997 by the Shiny Entertainment team that created MDK", has gone on to make console/PC titles Giants: Citizen Kabuto and Armed & Dangerous, and is now "devoting itself to the [Sony] PSP exclusively." Loeb justifies this arguably risky move to the "unproven terrain of PSP development" by suggesting: "The PSP will enable a developer like us to make cutting edge games quickly, alleviating the challenge all small developers currently face", and argues the kind of games that will be successful on the PSP are "Games that focus on opportunity game play. Games that are really fun to play right away. You get them immediately, they're cool, you play them for 15 minutes and you've got a very satisfying experience."

5 of 24 comments (clear)

  1. Hmm. by mr_jrt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Surely what they're saying is true for all handhelds though? Besides, when time is as valuble as it will be in 15 minute increments, loading times are going to need to be tweaked an awful lot.

    --
    Boo.
  2. Moon Pulling a Romero? by superultra · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If this were Irrational speaking, or Bioware, or another proven creative team I'd believe them. But while Planet Moon hasn't really bombed on anything, they haven't exactly done anything groundbreaking either. Their two games in house, Giants and Armed and Dangerous, actually exhibit a progression away from creativity. A&D is fun and funny- I'm playing through it right now - but it's essentially the action levels from Giants stretched into one big game. Nothing in the game screams "creative" although I see no reason why it couldn't have.

    I think what Loeb and Moon want is more chances at bat. They might get that, of course, but I think they're going to be surprised to find that creativity might as hard to pull off on the PSP as the Xbox and PC. If Sony locks in the specs they've been touting, it's not much less powerful than a PS2, so in terms of graphic design and what have you we're still working with a system that will require extensive development time. And, the PSP is portable. Right now anyway, the gameboy library is far more licensed than any of the console games. Creative games get passed over routinely because they're lost in the morass of subpar Mary Kate and Ashley and Finding Nemo games. What's more is that they may find the PSP a little more crowded than they're obviously hoping for. If it's the GBA kids that the PSP pulls, they'll want to play Finding Nemo 2. If it's the home console owners, they'll want to play Madden. There's little room for creativity no matter where you are in video games right now, but Moon seems intent on convincing themselves otherwise.

    So, what I'm trying to say is that this seems like Planet Moon has talked themselves out of the possibility that they just might not be able to make groundbreaking games,. What Loeb is saying, essentially, is that it was development costs that stopped them from making their great game, not that they can't make great games.

    Well, best of luck to them. I think that if they had that special creative spark within them, it would've shown up already.


    Endnote: I'm not sure we can count MDK as some kind of creative track record. Dave Perry and Shiny worked on that as well and went on to work on the glorious testament to non-creative-ness that is Enter the Matrix.

    1. Re:Moon Pulling a Romero? by cbirdsong64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, I read this story on Gamespot the other day and thought "Hmmmm, seems like they're after the wrong next gen handheld." The PSP is a system of ports. The DS is going to be where all the groundbreaking, innovative games are born.

    2. Re:Moon Pulling a Romero? by Graftweed · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Agreed, but it's been the same for the past few generations of gaming devices (handhelds and otherwise) due in part to Nintendo's philosophy.

      Seems you've got everyone saying 'Ok, let's go out and make the very best games we possibly can' while Nintendo's line seems to be 'Let's go out and make the most _innovative_ games we can' They might tank horribly from time to time and there's more than a few examples already in Nintendo's past history, but they land some wonderful gems from time to time.
      "Games that focus on opportunity game play. Games that are really fun to play right away. You get them immediately, they're cool, you play them for 15 minutes and you've got a very satisfying experience."
      Another example of the above, this seems to have been lifted straight from one of Nintendo's press releases. This was what they were aiming for with the early cube titles such as Pikmin and Luigi's Mansion. The rationale being that people have less and less time nowadays and so they'll want titles that they can pick up for short amounts of time and still get some fun out of them. As opposed to the 50-hour epic RPG.

      Bottom line, there will be room for both the PSP and the DS, they'll just have different appeal and the companies behind them will be pushing different philosophies.
  3. Wait a minute.. EASIER to develop games? by GaimeGuy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The PSP seems to be a Ps2 in portable form: How in the hell are games going to be EASY to make, then? I don't recall the Ps2 being easy to develop for, and with the heavy emphasis on power in the PsP, I'd say the development costs will become dangerously close to console titles. And with Sony stating recently that the PSP is meant to be played inside the home, I question ANYTHING that has to do with the PSP. I don't think even Sony knows what they're doing: They're making a portable system, which looks like it'll cost a lot, and have very low battery life, and they're claiming it's supposed to be used inside the home, and that, and I quote Ken Kutaragi, "No one would go out and play video games," I really don't think Sony knows what they're in for. The fact that all the PSP demos at E3 were basically video demos, and the fact that they were all being piped from PCs, makes the demonstrations of the power of the PSP seem to be a big fat lie. We've yet to see anything run on the actual PSP hardware, and I wouldn't be surprised if it turned out that the PSP's power is closer to that of the N64 and PSOne than the Ps2. Even so, the design of the PSP is begging for high development costs, and I don't see HOW it'll be easy to develop for.

    Not to mention the fact that people are drooling over the PSP, despite this. The scary thing is, the PSP could probably be released with a battery life of one hour, a price of $300, and still become more popular than the GBA. That's how alienated gamers are, today. I really hope that the PSP flops, not just because I'm a Nintendo fanboy, but because the industry will be in deep trouble if Sony can get their feet wet in the handheld portion, as well.