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I am a college student who wants to make games because why not? I used to not like computers much, but I changed my mind (obviously). I'm one of those crazy people who think that games are an art form (Electric notwithstanding; I'm still trying to figure out how to actually make art.) The alias "Cheese-Water" comes from a field trip in 5th grade, where we ordered lunch ahead of time, and what we ordered was printed on our name tags. I ordered cheese pizza and water, so on my name tag was printed, "Cheese Water Marsee," and nothing else. I thought that was funny, so I used it.

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Electric Release!

CheeseWater Blog

After two years of on-and-off Valve-Time development, Electric is finally up for whoever wants in, here on Indie DB! I’ve chosen Indie DB as my distribution platform to reach a wider audience, and to save on bandwidth on my self-hosted server. For the first time ever, I actually released a full game! Also, now that I can do other things without the guilt of not doing Electric, I’m going to start doing other things, like continue to learn Unity! <The sound of those weird party whistle things! Also confetti!>

I still plan on maintaining Electric. If you have a bug report, submit it by “contacting” me in the Profile section. If something new comes up, I’ll probably do a quick post here linking to it, but the main attraction will be there.

I’ve learned a lot from this experience, such as:

  • Get someone else to make graphics for you
  • After hard-coding a whole game (even in BASIC), Unity looks really good
  • Actually good AI is kind of hard
  • Multiplayer is really hard (though I actually learned that from something else, just during Electric’s development time)

And so much more! Also, I learned that “laser” is spelled “laser” and not “lazer.” I wish I’d caught that error earlier.

I do plan to revisit Electric in the future. As in, for a while, until I get actually good, that’s probably all I’ll make. I figure that the best way to get good at making games (for me, anyway) is to just get really good at one kind of game (like how Code Masters is with racing games or Valve with FPSs), and then figure out what I learned from that to apply to other things. Next up is the Unity engine, maybe still 2D, the idea being that I can transfer the logic fairly easily (translating from BASIC to C#, of course), unless it turns out to be more trouble than its worth, what with C# being so much more flexible (meaning that a direct translation would be stupid), and the fact that I don’t need to deal with drawing functions (meaning that a direct translation would be even more stupid). But I’ll worry about that later; I plan on getting very familiar with Unity before I start on a big project like that, so you won’t be seeing that any time soon. Nothing is set in stone, anyway.

The change log is short for this one. Normally I would use bullet points, but there’s so few of them that it doesn’t really matter, so I’ll just list them. Graphical bugs involving the trees in the background have been fixed, when a plane blows up pieces fly out, and the damage of the charging weapons has been cut in half because they were WAY too powerful before. Some issues with setting controller axes have been fixed, but if you have a joystick with a throttle control, I still recommend having it set to around 50% so that it doesn’t assume that you want the throttle to control everything. Overall, it’s functionally pretty much the same as before.

One more thing, on an unrelated topic: rando posts on my blog. I’ll get around to it reeeeaaaal soon. Bad life sim things that middle and high schools put kids through sometimes. Classics. And then, a roud-up of things I’ve learned about these things since.

Last but not least (the previous item was least, for the weird people like me who were wondering): happy new year!

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