Until tomorow (22 Dec 2020), the Mothership Discord server is hosting the 20x20 Jam. Make a piece of Mothership content (any sort) in Playscii in 20x20 format, and upload a png to the server. Winner gets a shirt?
I entered this thing, “Containment Sphere 5”.
20x20 is just too dense to be easily digestible, so I thought I’d expand some of it here (the submission itself is still only the image).
- The map is the net of a regular icosahedron (d20). The repeated letters at the top and bottom are the same room with connecting hallways doubled. The map wraps at the edges of the screen.
- There is an energy management game implied: it costs 2◆ to pressurize a room and 1◆ to open a door (hallways all have heavy blast doors and fail closed).
- Additionally some amount of energy is taken each “turn” by “anomaly containment”. The intent is that the +- value is a projection of the next turn’s consumption. (There is already some risk in the present configuration.)
- What happens when there isn’t enough power for anomaly containment will depend on the anomaly, but it might be related to VENT.
- WOOD is intentionally weird and vague. It’s a leftover from the derelict generation tables in Dead Planet.
- I opted not to use any of the available CRT effects. Instead, I drew on my real-life experiences designing operator interfaces for modern LCD monitors using tools from 10-20 years earlier that only go up to 640x480 anyway. The CRT effects all look “fake” to me, but the weird muted colors look very real.
- Possible missions on the containment sphere might include evacuation, recovery, restoration of power generation, or anything anomaly-related.
I kept thinking about usability, so after I entered I kept tweaking it. I re-keyed all the rooms so that rooms on opposite corners are in the same row as each other in the key. This might be useful if I made an interactive version, because it would aid memory if you rotated the map.
Finally, I wanted a way to communicate the “wrapping” nature of the map. Without making it interactive, animating it seemed to be the way to go. Ultimately I think it hurt the usability too much, but it was an interesting experiment.
Anyway, Playscii is fun and if you’ve got a bit of time today, you can still get your entry into the game jam. Good luck!
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