Sunday, March 27, 2011

Fireman Sack's Big Birthday Adventure

Before we begin I may as well point out that if you visit the blog for the art (You poor fools) then you might want to skip this post because there's no art in it. Well, some sort of art, but not the type you usually get. I'm not really sure why I'm even making this post - it doesn't really belong on here, but I guess it does explain part of the reduction of art output over the last two months. The rest of the reduction I've gone into before; and I've mentioned this too in passing, so you may as well see it.

Little Big Planet 2 may be the greatest time suck ever invented by man. It's a game, but unlike other time sucks such as RPG's or MMO's the actual game is really quite short. It has that in common with those FPS games with a focus on Multiplayer like Call of Duty or Homefront (Which you should totally buy...), but it's online experience isn't really the focus either, although it has 4 player co-op and verses portions. No, Little Big Planet 2 is a time suck because it allows you to make your own levels. The original LBP allowed this too, but LBP2 takes it to another level entirely (Har-Har).  My son loves the game proper, and I'm addicted to making (mostly dreadful) things.
So with my Son's birthday approaching I thought it would be nice to merge these two things.  I would make him a level as a birthday present.  Yes, yes you capitalist mooks we bought him a real present as well - it's a bike; he loves it.  But where's the care and attention in that?  By making him a level it could be custom tailored to his likes and interests.  I was off the mark a bit since he got into pirates in a big way when it was half finished, but thankfully he didn't completely go off fire engines.  Anyway, lets get on with it.


This is close to the start of his level. When it begins he meets a Sackbot bearing a remarkable resemblance to Fireman Sam's Station Officer Steele who tells him he'd better get off to work or he'll be late. Sackbot's are just programmable characters in the game. In the game's levels proper they look like cardboard robots - that's my Son's character in the screen above(which looks like them) - but they can look like anything really - this one looks like a potholing Steele, since Steele likes potholing. Anyway, you travel through the caves for a bit. The screen above is right before a cave-in, which is handy since without it you couldn't continue.


Here's a random skull inset into the wall. It's possible to "lethalise" the level at the beginning, making it harder - When you do that the skull jumps out of the wall and laughs at you, but usually it just sits there as decoration.


As well as the cave-ins and the random skulls this quiet cave in Wales also turns out to be an active volcano.  Who'd have thought it?  You have to use a grappling hook to traverse to the far side.  He's 4, it doesn't have to make sense as long as it's awesome.


This bit is in a cave with a giant electrified 4 in the background. In order to proceed you have to grapple up a wall, but when you do so the wall splits off from the cliff and falls down to form a bridge (With a jump pad on it allowing you to ascend). The arrows at the top there tell you where to go once you've made it up there - they light up and everything.  Complicated stuff this you know...


Eventually our hero is ejected from the caves through this well looking thing.  I was going to have it be a mini volcano, but then I forgot, so there's just a big spring that kicks you up to the surface.  I claim no responsibility for the awesome background as it comes with the game.  Actually most of this comes with the game - everything is built of preexisting materials - you just reshape them to your needs.  And yes, everything has a sort of homemade crafty look to it, hence the stitching on the grass.  Those water droplet looking things are score bubbles by the way - you collect them for points.


Around the corner you meet Elvis the firefighter who's forgotten how to drive the fire engine.  He's the only character who's actually named, which is relevant to a joke later on.  Of course it's only a joke if you know the show it's based on, and are 4.  It has nothing to do with his name - Elvis, as far is my son is concerned, is a Welsh firefighter, and not the King of Rock and Roll. Thankfully I don't believe he thinks Mr. Hitler is a greengrocer (though he knows he only has one ball, but has yet to realise this means testicle).


Here's another picture of the fire engine. I spent an hour building it, I may as well get some mileage out of it.


This is the halfway point of the level (and this post).  Yes, really, it's quite an epic when you're 4.  In this bit you drive the fire engine around the city putting out fires, like this one:


No, the city really isn't all that pretty is it.  That's because I was running out of the time I already didn't have.  I'm working on a prettier version of this that I can take my time over.  It will be quite some time coming what with everything else I have going on.


Once you've put out a few fires you get called tot he mansion that's now ablaze. When you arrive you get out of the fire engine and are greeted by this little cutscene showing you that you need to rescue this ostentatiously dressed woman. The female firefighter at the scene informs you that you can't use the big hose on the engine until the house is empty (and I think that sounds vaguely rude personally).

You both don your fire helmets with built in hoses and wade into the fray.


That's quite an inferno.  The hardest and most time consuming thing to do in the entire level was to have the other fire fighter follow you into he building and then go off and fight the fire downstairs while you go up.  Then, after the rescue she gives it up and follows you out again.  It sounds so simple but it took hours to work out, with many minutes of me yelling "Stop following my guy upstairs you tart!".  It made doing the end sequence a lot easier due to what I'd learned doing this (seemingly) simple bit though.


Once you save the unnamed and overdressed woman you hop into the fire engine and use the big hose to douse the fire. Then the Woman says "Thank you so much, if you go in the back room there's a reward for you." Up until now the back room has been blocked by fire. This shot is from the now fireless house on the way to the room. Before you get there though all the lights go out.  When they come back on it's to reveal a cake in the shape of a 4. Then the camera pulls out to reveal your firefighting chums who shout "Surprise!"


"Happy birthday" says faux Officer Steele, "Elvis has baked you a cake."  "Yes," continues Elvis, "It took me all morning to make."


The number 4 cake promptly catches fire and Elvis looks devastated (This is the Elvis joke - Elvis is the worse cook in the world). Shortly afterwards the cake explodes, but not before the fire has popped the balloons. How sad.



It's all Okay though because then a whole host of assorted characters run into the room, fireworks fly, holographic sun and moon start whizzing around and basic insanity happens. Officer Steele looks confused and Elvis looks crushed but everyone else is having a fine time. The end, fade to black, and then the words Happy 4th Birthday.

The whole thing took a few weeks to make (it might have been less but I was busy with work and sick a lot of course) and he loves it, or seems to.  We had to play it through 3 times back to back, the final time with the lethaliser sticker in place (He just about died himself when the skull popped out laughing at him).  So all in all quite the success.  I put it up online for others to play (You have to in order to have multi part stuff like this as it won't all fit in the game's memory at once) and a grand total of three people bothered to try it, and one of them didn't like it.  Well, bollocks to them, my Son did and it's his present, so there.

If you're interested in actually experiencing this epic adventure yourself (and have Little Big Planet 2, and have in fact made it through to this point in the post), you can find it under my game name (which just so happens to be the same as the one I write the blog under; HarlequiNQB), just do a text search in "Community" and this and my other levels should pop right up.  Or you can search for "Fireman Sack's Big Birthday Adventure" instead, but the first option is quicker.

Okay, now that's out of my system I promise not to wrote another post specifically about a Little Big Planet 2 level ever again.  Unless I do something completely awesome...

Saturday, March 26, 2011

If You Can't Draw Just Scribble

ScribblerToo is one of those web based doodling programs. It's not unique in this regard, there are rather a lot of them around. Usually the process will go something like this: Friend links to sketch program, I take a look, sketch something dreadful, decide I'd rather be doing it using something else (such as a pencil, or Artrage, or my elbow dunked in poo - which would still be preferable to some of these packages), close webpage, forget all about it.
ScribblerToo has a hook though - it does something that I'm not sure I can do in any other package. The best way to describe it is as "Painting with Cobwebs". Every time you draw a line it works out how close it is to another line you've already drawn, the closer the line the more likely it will be that it forms a "web" connection to it. The easiest way to understand is to try it yourself - Don't fret if you can't draw because it works just as well on abstract stuff. It's called ScribblerToo for a reason y'know? Well, two reasons, I'll get to the other in a moment.
So then my friend Wayne first linked me to an image done in it I was impressed, and then after using it myself I was even more impressed.  I'd likely never use it for anything "finished" (although it probably could be used for it) but for just doodling it's a lot of fun.  None of the following pictures took more than 5 minutes, and most were done in far less.  Don't expect these scribble posts all that often (if ever again), I just thought you might be interested in seeing the package and what it can do.

Of all of these this was the first, and is still my favourite.  No reference.
Based on a thumbnail on the ScribblerToo Page

From a photo of some guy on a ship.  Probably from US Navy's site, but I don't recall for certain.

No reference (You can tell, right?)

No reference

No reference (Though he does look oddly like my Brother)

From a photo of William Gibson (I think).  Looks bugger all like him though.

No Reference

From a photo, I know not where from.  Yes, it was probably a porn site of some kind - Hush, they're good for reference.

No reference

From a photo - again no idea where from, but probably a gay site.  And hush again - I don't discriminate on where the reference comes from as long as it's good reference.

No reference

No reference

No reference

From a photo, but doesn't look anything like the original.

So there you have it.
Only one more thing to note, which is that I went and looked at ScribblerToo's predecessor Scribbler. The main difference is that you do your scribble first and it covers it in webs afterwards. It's OK, but I think I prefer ScribblerToo's more immediate system. Anyway, here's the piece I did in the original, for posterities sake.  On the left is what I drew, on the right is what it made of it.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

And Then Two Come Along At Once!

It's been ages since I've done a speedpaint, but it's been even longer since I actually posted any. Time to make amends.

In fact I have far more to post than I thought I would. In my addled brain I was under the impression that I'd posted some at the end of January, but I didn't. Given this, and the similar comments I've made in the last two posts I have to assume I had a particularly vivid dream where I went on a posting frenzy. You know, the sort where you wake up and think it actually happened? Happened to me yesterday in fact; I dreamed it was Monday, woke up, panicked because I was late for work and then realised it was Saturday. Typical.


Time Taken - Various (Between 2 and 20 each)

Various studies for a painting I was planning on before the world went mad. I may come back to it one day, but for now I may as well post the studies before I forget all about them. Yes, that's predominantly Solid Snake from the Metal Gear series.


Time Taken - 45 Minutes

This one was an experiment into painting flesh tones and bounce light and things.  I didn't "finish" it as you can see, but I thought it came out quite well anyway.


Time Taken - 50 Minutes

We had a dog randomly turn up at our house back in January. Cute little King Charles Spaniel looking lost. We (well, my Wife and Son) did a tour of the neighborhood looking for his owners but no dice. Son wanted to keep the dog, but of course we had to call Animal Control and have it taken away. A note to non-Americans, "Animal Control" sounds like they come with flamethrowers and wearing hazmat suits yelling for people to "stand back from the animal", this is not the case - the animal control guy was very nice, wore a shirt and drove a small white van.

Anyway, I dubbed him Toby while he was here due to his resemblance to my friends late dog, but it turned out his name was Butterscotch. I don't know about you, but if I was a boy dog and my owners called me Butterscotch I'd run away too. Incidentally, I think this is my best speed paint so far. Your mileage may vary.


Time Taken - 30 Minutes

This is what happens when I speedpaint with no reference of any kind. Not the worse thing ever, but not very inspiring either.


Time Taken - 10 Minutes

I took my glasses off to clean them and caught my reflection in the monitor - decided to try painting it without the specs.  Not a great work of art, but you can tell it's me at least.

Incidentally, I had my eyes tested recently and the optician asked me what the first row I could read without my glasses was.  I couldn't read any of them, so he scrolled down and down, the letters getting bigger as he went.  Eventually he ran out of letters to scroll through and I still couldn't read any - just saw a big blurry blob.  Put my glasses back on, and what's on the screen that I can now read?  A gigantic 'E' and nothing else.  How sad.

Time Taken - 45 Minutes

An experiment using the pallete knife in ArtRage - 4 blobs of paint smeared around for 45 minutes (plus a couple of minor touchups on the face and highlights).

I actually took a note of the source for this one (I usually forget too, terrible I know).


Time Taken - 45 minutes

Not a particularly good one, but quite relaxing to paint. More experimenting. This time painting without zooming or panning, and mixing the majority of the colour on the canvas itself. I may do a better piece from the same source one day. It's from a screengrab of Project Runway if you're curious, but I don't remember which one - it's probably from one of Tom and Lorenzo's awesome dissections of the show though.


Time Taken - 40 Minutes

This was a study I did right before starting on Annette's profile pic.  I'd never drawn or painted a horse before that I can recall, so it seemed like a good idea to have a couple of dry runs.


Time Taken - 45 Minutes

Based this on a picture that came up in a search for the word Stall (I was doing the horse research at the time). Liked it, decided to paint it, but it was pretty late so I gave up before I had to paint all the people. Sorry people. Here's the link to the reference picture.


Time Taken - 45 Minutes

March 1st is St. David's Day; the Patron Saint of Wales.  Since I'm Welsh this is a day that has some significance, and, since you probably aren't aware, the Red Dragon is the symbol of wales (I believe Wales is the only country with a dragon on its official flag - it's a red one of course).  Anyway, painted this on February 28th to celebrate the occasion.

And here's another link to the source image (I must be getting better at making a note of them)

That's your lot for today.

Oh, okay, one more thing.  One of the lovely people on the Art Rage forums called Moosie was asking for advice regarding a portrait of his Granddaughter, so of course I had to stick my nose in and give an example.  Here's the resulting sketch.  I'm posting it here because I quite like it and I've yet to think of where else I could sensibly put it on the blog.


And I think that's something quite nice to end on, don't you?

You Wait All Day for a Bus...

Aaaaand I'm sick again. This time it's more of an extended yuckiness than an all out explosive fluid explosion like a cold or the trots, but still. I joked with my wife about a month ago that it would be great to go a whole week without someone in the household being sick. It was a joke at the time, but now it's not so funny. Here's a rundown of the last few weeks (This isn't all about sickness by the way, just showing how events like to pile up - but feel free to skip over if you just want to see pictures).

I'm working on some things at work that require me to work late on a fairly regular basis (I didn't last week due to the being sick thing, but prior to that I was, and will be again). In early March my in-laws came to visit for a few days. That was nice, I like my in-laws. They left on the Saturday morning, and on that Saturday night my Mother arrived with her boyfriend. They were here for two weeks (They just got home last night). While they were here both my Son and my mother came down with something. This was one of those fluid explosion sicknesses and seemed to last for ever. They're all better now though. On top of these thing my wife has being doing handy things around the house (Shush, she likes it - go read her blog). This included fixing the Washing Machine and installing a new controller for the bathroom fan. Oh, and my Son had his birthday too, with all the chaos that entails. And my PC decided it didn't want to be online any more. And... Oh, never mind, you get the idea.

This is why it's been a while between posts. For once I can honestly say it isn't even remotely because I've been lazy, but because I haven't had a chance. Despite all this there is much to show, but not in this post. This one is just some sketches I've managed to get done over the crazy time. Later posts will have other things, including some speedpaints I thought I'd posted back in January but actually didn't and some info on some Little Big Planet stuff I did (I'll explain more later). But for now, sketchville:


The Good
Normally a lot of these probably wouldn't be in the good pile, but then normally I work from reference, at least to some degree. These were all done without any, mostly because this allowed me to grab my sketchbook and draw without needing to cast around for something to draw first. You'll note there are weapons in this and the bad pile - I had something in mind I was working toward, but I'm not sure it'll ever progress beyond these images here. You may not a lack of complete hands and feet and so forth (and those that are there are poor). Well, I just started on the anatomy of feet, and hands will be along after that - until then I'll still need reference for either to look decent. In fact this whole thing (Three weeks of drawing with no reference) has been quite useful for identifying areas I still need a bit of work, those where I need a lot of work, and those where I haven't even started working.


The Bad
I hate to admit it, but aspects of some of these ones aren't bad really, but then they're spoiled by something else in the same image; the hand on that guy to the right, the connection between torso and hips on that girl to the left. Aspects of these are great, but as a whole; yuck. Again, this is great for showing me where I need to put in work for improvement, but it's rather sad to be publicly showing just how much further I need to go to be decent with any regularity.

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