Arcen's currently-inwork puzzle game now has an official name: Tidalis.
The teaser
preview for the game has been updated to show the game's new logo,
as well as a lot of the game's current art. Please bear in mind that
most of the middle-ground sprites are currently missing from the shown
backgrounds, and that the look of the HUD is quite temporary. The new
screenshots are from the actual game -- not concept art -- and so
should give a better glimpse of what is coming.
In other Arcen news, the tower defense game A Valley Without Wind
(AVWW) has been pushed back to 2011. In place of that title, the
completion of Arcen's zombie puzzle-based adventure game, Alden Ridge,
will be the next priority for the company after Tidalis. Alden Ridge
is already about 70% complete (though filled with temporary art
and music), and now that the last design roadblocks have been
resolved with this game, it should fit better with Arcen's 2010 lineup.
Most specifically, completion of this game in place of AVWW will allow
adequate time for the second expansion to AI War to also be completed in
the fourth quarter. Currently, development of AVWW is expected to be
Arcen's primary focus for the first 6-8 months of 2011, or more if
needed. It's a big game (as is Alden Ridge, but Alden Ridge already has
80 completed levels, a finished engine, a complete level editor, and so
on).
We at Arcen are quite excited to share all of our upcoming work with you
-- much more information to come about Tidalis in particular in another
2-3 weeks, along with public pre-release versions for demo or for full
access to via preorder. Stay tuned!
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
HellBored: Chris Park Interviewed About AI War and The Zenith Remnant
HellBored recently conducted an
interview with Chris Park about AI War, the reception of The Zenith
Remnant, developing games as an individual versus as part of a team, and
why developing capable RTS AI is such a challenge for the industry.
Read The Interview
Read The Interview
Metacritic: AI War 40th Best PC Game of 2009
All the way back in December, Metacritic
released their annual list of the year's best-reviewed games on each
platform. Things have been so busy here at Arcen that somehow we missed
posting a news item about this, but we thought it was pretty cool to
say the least. For a game that started out as a one-man project with no
budget, it's pretty amazing to see that wind up at the #40 slot out of
all the great indie and AAA titles that were released during the year.
Read The Article At Metacritic
Read The Article At Metacritic