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#16
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
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#17
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
Bowling Ball. main rule is you can't let it leave the ground.
American (nerf) Football. Heck, a Rugby ball would be fun too. |
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#18
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
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#19
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
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http://spectrum3847.org/PIPEFALL |
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#20
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
I've always liked the idea of absurdly heavy or light game pieces (i.e. bowling balls or balloons). Really big ones (like 2001's goals) would be cool, as well.
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#21
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
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(Within the limits of sanity, I don't think we're going to be playing Recycle Rush 2 with Fiat 500s) |
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#22
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
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An important but so far thus far overlooked criterion is consistency in how it responds across both batches and time on the field. An object should not handle differently during the final match than the first, nor should they be different for a week 1 event and the Championship. |
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#23
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
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#24
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
Not to mention the change in balls that occurred at Champs before eliminations. They were not just new, they had a totally different compression characteristic iirc.
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#25
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
I think a game using Roomba's (cute but useless robotic vacuum cleaners).
I even came up with a game for it called Roomba Roundup. Teams gather up Roombas and place them in their corral. Teams can also steal Roombas and place them in their corrals. The team that has the most Roombas in their corrals (they have to be in the corrals) wins the match. |
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#26
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
One other criteria in my book is the interest the game piece has outside of the game in things like parades and demonstrations where there is only one or two robots. Kids love to catch a ball/other flying object. A robot stacking totes is not so exciting.
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#27
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
our most used robot for demos is by far 2012 (it was our best robot, but it also demonstrates super well), and before that was 2009's. however, that can't happen every year, or there won't be enough variation in how the game is played (after 3 years of shooters from 2012-14, I was kinda glad that Recycle rush had a different sort of design challenge for my last yer, tbh)
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#28
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
I think that kong dog toys would be great personally. http://www.petsmart.com/dog/toys/kon...pfm%3Dcategory
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#29
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
The most important question about the new game pieces is going to be do they sink, float or have neutral buoyancy?
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#30
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Re: Unusual, potential game pieces
Here are a few ideas for things we haven't dealt with yet:
REALLY big balls (diameter more than twice as large as the largest permissible robot), octahedrons, dodecahedrons, isodecahedrons, solid/walled tetrahedrons, ellipsoids (either prolate or oblate), "very light" shapes (e.g. ping pong balls, whiffle balls, open-cell foam), stiff long cylinders (bats, batons, clubs, broomsticks, virges), and of course, familiar objects with irregular shapes: flat broom, mop, weed eater, boom box, brief cases, bungee cords, baloon animals, animal chew toys, books, component parts (e.g. what if we had to replace a laser printer cartridge with a robot?), dumbells, jingle bells, real bell-shaped bells, bottles (pick your size and shape; I'm thinking of 6.25 oz classic coke bottles), aerobies, model cars, teddy bears, Barbie/GI Joes, loaves of french bread, calculators, laptop computers, USB memory sticks (you have to plug them in and read data off of them to know what to do next), I-beams (or lengths of railroad tie), lincoln logs/tinker toys/erector set pieces, shoes (human, horse, or brake), mannequin parts, pillows, lengths of pipe, pipe fittings, skillets, strainters, Anderson Connectors (plug 'em in?), hammers, wrenches, pliers, wheels, and soma cube puzzle pieces. This was the result of about 10 minutes of brainstorming by one guy, who intentionally didn't run any seam more than about three or four items (I could have gone on with kitchen stuff alone as long as the list above). The GDC won't run out of "new" game pieces anytime soon... And on the OBTW front: I completely blocked my memory of having seen Star Trek V until about half an hour into seeing it for (presumably) the second time. Makes mini-bots and Jar Jar seem well-considered by comparison. |
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