• Register


LogoPNG


Explore Mandagon, a world inspired by Tibetan theology and philosophy.


With a focus on life and death, discover what it means to make a true sacrifice.




Traverse a vivid interpretation of Bardo, the Tibetan word for limbo.


Learn what experiences brought you there and what forces pull you through . . .





A short narrative led experience with a focus on in-game story telling and exploration.

We're aiming for about 30 minutes to an hour of gameplay.





Of course we'd be interested in expanding on this, but for now it's only a small side project.

It's just something we've been putting together while we finish the writing on our main project { adam }





We're getting close to release now, with only a handful of bits n bobs to implement.

We'll be putting it out for free on PC, possibly mac and linux also.

We'll have more audio and visual oddities to share here in the coming weeks.


SkullLittle


  • View media
  • View media
  • View media
  • View media
  • View media
  • View media
Post article RSS Articles

Mandagon - Building levels

Level Design/Theory Tutorial 1 comment

We're so very close to finishing Mandagon - From a visual stand point the game is nearly all there, Audio and sound fx are well under way. The majority of remaining work lies in the hands of our programmer. So lots of back end work, balancing how obscure/mysterious we can be with exploration and story prompts before the game becomes unplayable!

So while programmers program, artists will art -

User Posted Image

We've been toying with the idea of releasing an art book and sound track as DLC for a couple of £$£'s while still keeping Mandagon a free game. What do you reckon?

________________________________________________________


In the meantime I thought it might be fun to break down my level design process -

Apologies if any of this is rudimentary to any of you. I was pretty new to this when I started on Mandagon, so I thought I'd share what I was able to learn along the way!

So it goes without saying Mandagon is built mainly from tile based pixel art. Very early on I was playing around to figure out what resolution to work in - After a lot of mucking about I settled on 32 X 32px for my tile size. I personally found it to be a good balance between detail and representation (if that makes sense?).

Pyxel Edit Was my work horse at this stage, and still is. Can't recommend it more strongly, it's still in its beta stages right now so it has its little quirks here and there, but it has served me well throughout!

Next step was actually figuring out how to build levels from tiles - Mandagon is like the second or third game I've worked on, and I'd never worked with tiles before, so every day's a school day!

My googling brought me to a little program simply and aptly named Tiled Map Editor.

So I had my first tiles and my tiled map editor, well equipped to begin mucking about! I was also teaching myself a bit of C# at the time, so with my 32px scale locked in I was able to play around with the relationship between level size and player movement speed - I had one test with a smaller map and slower movement speed, another with a massive map and a speedy player.

Once this became a full project for me and the rest of us, we had a bit of an internal discussion and landed somewhere in the middle, not too fast, not too slow, not too big, not too small.

I then began to build the level you can see in our Greenlight trailer

After a modest but mostly positive reception on the Greenlights we were keen to deliver. Discussions led us to add new ways to traverse level and bump up the exploration side of things. So to compliment this I decided to scrap our original level and rebuild from scratch at double the size - que countless sleepless nights.

All that left me with a map that needed to be 187 tiles by 248. Throughout all this I realised classic pen and paper wasn't gunna be much use to me and my work process - I wanted a way for my layout sketches to feed directly into the final build. Also working at full scale in Tiled was just too daunting. So here's what I did -

I already knew the exact size of my map, that was locked in. So I just made a Pyxel Edit canvas that was set so one pixel equaled one tile, 187px by 248px. I had a colour pallet to represent my main tile sets. This gave me freedom to sketch chunks of the level as I would on paper and then zoom in to work on specific sections with more focus.

User Posted Image

Then zoom back out, paint in joining sections and larger chunks. Zero back and fourth between sketchbook and computer. And then, knowing the players max jump height/distance, I could run my cursor through the map to see if there were any dead ends or sticking points.

User Posted Image

Once I was as happy as could be with the layout, I saved myself a PNG, brought it into Photoshop, then, since my final tiles are 32 by 32, I just multiplied the resolution by 32 to get my full sized map.

I could just drop this full sized image into Tiled as a base and start layering up the final tiles

User Posted Image

Once I'd got the basics in I could test the level for real and iron out a few creases

User Posted Image

And finally, after a bit of back and fourth between building and testing I felt safe enough to start getting my detail and polish in.

User Posted Image

This is the stage I'm at now, adding new tile sets when needed, and still optimizing sections of the level as I go. Although it's mostly the aesthetics that I'm working on now.

So Mandagon is only a matter of weeks away now and it's mostly polish and shine left to do. We're super excited to get it out and see what ya'll think of it!

Thankin' Ya'll

Thankin' Ya'll

News

Mandagon has been greenlit. Thanks for your support!

MANDGON Trailer & Greenlight

MANDGON Trailer & Greenlight

News

Story & gameplay trailer is here! Also you can now support Mandagon on Steam Greenlight!

Post comment Comments
jakonmi
jakonmi - - 19 comments

will there be a sequal? like about shiva ad other buddhas etc

and spirituality/psychics??

Reply Good karma Bad karma+1 vote
Guest
Guest - - 689,388 comments

This comment is currently awaiting admin approval, join now to view.

Post a comment

Your comment will be anonymous unless you join the community. Or sign in with your social account:

X