Welcome to Wicked Pissah Games. My name is Keith Peters, and you may know me from my other site, BIT-101. That site’s done pretty well by me, and I have no intention of shutting it down, but here I am with another one. Why?
Well, over the years, I’ve dug into all kinds of cool Flash and ActionScript stuff, and learned more and more and squeezed all kinds of neat behaviors out of the Flash player. Done lots of stuff with math and physics, and along the way learned programming. Yeah, you read that right. I learned programming while doing all the cool stuff on the BIT-101 labs. I guess when I started, I kina sorta thought I knew some programming. And a year or two in, I felt I was pretty much a hotshot. But when I look back on what I was doing back then, from a purely development viewpoint, it was pretty scary. So as I was doing fun stuff and showing it off on my site, I was also busy learning all kinds of best practices, architecture, patterns, and all the other stuff that goes into making solid scalable applications. Most of that manifested itself at my regular jobs where I was writing said applications.
But a funny thing started to happen. The more I went into this whole architecting and designing and pattern hatching stuff, and the more I made solid, scalable apps, the less fun it became. The more you go into this stuff, the more you are drawn in to making these really boring applications. At least they are boring to me. Boring compared to making something spring around the screen or making funky shapes with the drawing api. It got to the point where I was really pretty burnt out on Flash all together. I’d do my day job, and that was fine, but when I came home, I’d just want to watch a movie or play a game or surf the net. No excitement about Flash at all anymore.
So I was looking for something to wake me up, something to be excited about. In the back of my mind for some time, has been the idea of doing some game development. Someone once said that a lot of the experiments I did on BIT-101 “orbited around being games.” I thought that was a really astute observation. They were like all these little pieces of games that were just floating around out there. I knew that if I could get focused enough to pull a handful of them into a single cohesive whole, I could create a decent game, or two. Or a dozen.
Then, a few weeks back, I was in a bookstore and saw Jobe Makar’s Flash MX Game Design Demystified. Yeah… Flash MX. And yeah, I know there’s an MX 2004 version, but the store didn’t have it. I could have gotten an up to date version on Amazon, but I figured even that would be dated, and what I was really looking for was the inspiration and some of the basic concepts of designing games. Not so much the code. So I bought it on the spot and read through it. Again, not page by page of how to do these things in AS1, but pulled out what I needed from it.
Then I started writing a game. The Walkers game that as of this writing is still being worked on. But WOW, was that fun! I knew that it was going to take a while to get to a point of being a real game, and I had an idea for another game that would be a bit simpler, the Gravity Pods game, that although not finished yet, is nearing something that could actually be released. I was up til 3 a.m. a couple of nights writing that stuff. It was like the good old days. Addicted to Flash again! And all that architecture and designs pattern stuff really paid off. It’s actually really fun to use that stuff when you are doing a project you are really into.
Now, while I, personally, was having a blast at writing these things, I read two things in the past week which really blew me away.
First was the news that Line Rider had been bought by a game dev company and is going to be released on the Nintendo DS and Wii. It’s an awesome game (if you can really call it a game), but it’s really simple in concept, and it’s totally something I could have done. I had figured out the mechanics of that kind of thing in Flash back in 2003 I think. So I kicked myself a bit, but the gears started turning.
The next was reading this article about how the guy behind the Desktop Tower Defense guy, and how well he had done on that game:
https://gigaom.com/2007/05/27/desktop-tower-defense/
Again, this game is not rocket science, but is amazingly addictive and has done very well by its creator.
I knew I had to get into this game development game, for real. And thus Wicked Pissah Games was born. Right now the two games I have up here are still works in progress, but I definitely plan on getting them done to the point where they can become fully playable games and enter the viral market. I had been thinking along the lines of creating simple free versions on line, and a more full featured AIR app that would sell for a small amount, but after reading the second article above, I think I’ll be going the same route as Desktop Tower Defense.
I also plan to blog here about various topics related to game design and development for casual games in Flash, though I don’t have plans at this time to release the games as open source. We’ll see.
Well, that’s my long-winded intro. Now let’s see if I can live up to it.