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The Secret of Double Fine’s Success – feature article in GamesTM issue 122

During GDC, I had the awesome opportunity to spend an hour with Tim Schafer, shooting the shit about his insane Kickstarter experience, his plans for the Double Fine Adventure, and what he thinks about the state of adventure games in general. It was an incredible conversation. (For me, anyway… he missed out on eating lunch so he might have felt otherwise!)

Through the magic of creative writing, that interview has transformed itself into a hefty feature article in Games™ issue 122, which went on sale today in the UK. This magazine can also be found at some newsstands and bookstores in the US (at least, Borders used to carry it, before they went kaput), or you can buy it online.

In the relatively short amount of time that’s passed since I wrote this article, I’ve been fairly involved with another Kickstarter project, so I’m even more aware now than I was when I talked to Tim of how much of an anomaly the Double Fine Adventure campaign was. The outpouring of donations—the outpouring of mainstream support for an adventure game—to be honest, with adventures being the niche that they are nowadays, I still can’t really believe it happened.

I don’t think that Double Fine’s experience has fundamentally changed the state of the adventure genre… and although certain crowd-funding doors have been opened for other “old” adventure game designers who want back in on the action (starting with Al Lowe, Jane Jensen, the Two Guys from Andromeda, and, soon, the guys behind Tex Murphy), comparisons to the ridiculously successful Double Fine campaign can actually make the (equally awesome) results of these campaigns seem less impressive. Still, anyone who cares about adventure games can’t deny that Tim Schafer made something amazing happen. A year ago, if you’d told me that all of these adventure legends would be staging comebacks, all at the same time, I would have laughed in your face (probably somewhat obnoxiously). But this is now the reality we live in, and Double Fine’s leap of faith has a lot to do with it.

I hope that the article captures some of the excitement of those five weeks when more than 87,000 people, unashamed, threw an obscene amount of money at Tim Schafer so he’d bring back something they’d lost long ago. And for those like me who never believed the “adventure games are dead” rumor in the first place, I think you’ll find his opinions about said rumor pretty encouraging. It all makes me very excited for the future.

Hillside Victorian deck (part 2)

After building the deck for the Hillside Victorian, I wasn’t sure how to finish it. I thought it should match the hot tub, but didn’t want too much brown to detract from the color scheme of the rest of the house (especially since there’s no brown or stained wood anywhere else). So, I turned to the internet for inspiration.

I really like how the flagstone foundation turned out, and wondered if there was a way to continue that for the deck. Initially I was thinking I would paint the deck gray (using one of the stone colors) and add lattice underneath it. I’m not sure anymore what search terms I used, but a Google image search along these lines turned up this image:

I’m not sure what makes a deck a deck, and a porch a porch, but who cares? After seeing this picture, I really liked the idea of extending the flagstone foundation around the base of the deck. I decided to paint the deck white, which is the trim color and also the color of the front stairs and other deck-like areas on the front of the house.

When assembling the deck, I left a gap between boards as advised by the instructions. I tried filling these with paint but the gaps were too big (as you can see at the top of the picture above). So I filled the gaps with wood filler (you can see the first several filled rows at the bottom of the photo).


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Hillside Victorian deck (part 1)

After completing the Hillside Victorian’s hot tub, I turned my attention to the deck. I’m using an old kit from Betty’s Wooden Miniatures. The dollhouse store had it marked down from $50 to $30 because they weren’t sure if all the pieces were there.

Since I was planning to bash the hot tub into the deck, I thought about just buying strip wood coming up with my own design, but $30 seemed reasonable for the amount of wood that came with it and a set of basic instructions to follow. Plus, there used to be a version of the kit that came with a hot tub and those instructions were included, so I figured that would make the bashing that much easier.

The first step was to build four supports, to be distributed evenly across the MDF base.

Since mine would have a hot tub in the corner, the stairs wouldn’t extend all the way across the deck, so I only built three of these.
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