Game designer Phillip duBarry (@pdubarry) on why Biblically themed games don’t have to be terrible:
http://whyidesigngames.tumblr.com/post/21778833975/phillip-dubarry
Services like Kickstarter and Amazon are upending the board game industry and creating new economic opportunities for game creators.
For the 50th episode of his Funding the Dream podcast, Richard Bliss (@GameWhisperer) gives a passionate, prophetic overview of the emerging new order.
http://www.buzzsprout.com/4646/46862-funding-the-dream-on-kickstarter-ep-50-richard-bliss-speaks-out
Solo playtest a real-time game: impossible?
Not to the BoardGameGeek designer forum. Some ideas for how to do it:
http://boardgamegeek.com/thread/794602/how-to-solo-playtest-realtime-games
Game Salute answers some questions about its Springboard service for crowdfunded board game projects:
http://www.purplepawn.com/2012/04/game-salute-and-springboard-what-do-they-actually-do/
Puzzle Strike designer David Sirlin on asymmetry, tournament-quality design and player elimination:
http://boardgamegeek.com/blogpost/9606/designer-diary-puzzle-strike-the-quest-for-a-tourn
What’s the secret to creating a sustainable game publishing business?
Michael Mindes (@MichaelMindes) of Tasty Minstrel Games (@TastyMinstrel) reveals all!
http://www.purplepawn.com/2012/04/3-simple-steps-to-create-lasting-board-game-success/
A great list of the best BoardGameGeek forum threads and geeklists on board game design. Covers a lot of territory:
http://boardgamegeek.com/geeklist/140807/best-bgg-forum-threads-geeklists-on-board-game-de
Table Top Studio, a new program for boardgame creators, is in private beta. You can design components and integrate with The Game Crafter:
http://boardgamegeek.com/thread/793161/table-top-studio-a-new-application-for-game-desi http://tabletopgamestudio.com/
“The most important skill to designing games is understanding why games are fun. In designing a game, you are trying to entertain a player (this can of course be serious thinky fun, wacky fun, banana fun, depending on the player). When you can identify that bit, you’re well on the way. To do this, you must play many games, with many people. A terrible fate.”
At what point is a game perfect?
/Benny Sperling (@benny275):
At what point is a game perfect? (Meaning no more playtesting) What would you consider a “perfect” game and why?
Samuel A. Liberty (@SA_Liberty):
When you’ve chiseled away all the bits that aren’t fun.
Grant Rodiek (@HerrohGrant):
I think Herr Liberty makes a good point. … I sincerely believe it’s one of the few pieces of philosophical nonsense that adds value.
Bryan Fischer (@bryanfischer):
It’s not about developing a perfect game, it’s about tweaking a game until its rules cannot be broken. Could still be a bad game.
Michael Fox (@idlemichael):
Surely there’s no such thing as a perfect game? You just need to know when to step back and say you’re done. But that’s HARD.
Designing children’s games: Grant Rodiek (@HerrohGrant) discusses his takeaways from a small survey of parents that he ran:
http://hyperbolegames.com/2012/04/16/the-joys-of-youth-part-1/
What due diligence do Kickstarter backers do before pledging? Get inside their head before launching your project.
A.J. Porfirio (@VanRyderGames) outlines his methods:
http://boardgamegeek.com/blogpost/9649/backing-kickstarters-due-diligence-and-red-flags
