![]() ![]() One such adjustment that is made is to reduce the size of the player’s hands so that the smaller hands match the smaller world relative to the height of the player. The option, which increases the size of the player opposed to reducing the decreasing the size of the world, adjusts the world around the player’s new height. Eventually the team settled on the idea of introducing a panel near the ground level of the museum kiosk behind which is a switch allowing the players to turn on the mode. Not wishing to introduce standard menu and options into the experience to break the immersion and “revert back to the olden days of interaction” of the game, the developers brainstormed different methods of incorporating this option into the game. In response to player feedback requesting that the developer make the game accessible to shorter players who were having trouble reaching some of the higher placed items within the game, developer Owlchemy implemented a “Smaller Human Mode” into the game. Players have the choice of 4 professions: Once the player completes all four job simulations, the player is offered a variety of modifiers which change the physics of the gameplay. Upon completing a set amount of tasks, the player is give the opportunity to return to the museum and select another profession or alternatively to stay in the current environment. Typically this amounts to throwing items around or at the player's robot supervisor. ![]() Player are also free to mess around in their setting and play with the various objects in their environment. For example, as a chef, whilst cooking pizza, players can choose any ingredients within reach to use as pizza toppings. Players are afforded a large amount of creative freedom in completing their task. The player's supervisor also continually comments on the human nature of the jobs in contrast with the efficiency of robots and repeatedly mentions the obsolescence of humans in general. For example, as a chef, the player is instructed to bake a cake for an underage customer's birthday party, and one of the ingredients is a flower, which sounds phonetically similar to "flour."
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |