In this free GDC Vault video from last month's big show, Tunic developer Andrew Shouldice discussed how he and the team at Isometric Games made mystery, secrets, and discovery a huge design pillar for their colorful adventure. Click the player above to watch the whole talk!
Shouldice started the talk with a few high-level player experience goals: he noted wanting to make a game that felt in some important ways like playing an NES game as a kid. He noted a previous talk by Frog Fractions developer Jim Stormdancer, who captured a lot of Shouldice's "vibe" goals nicely:
"He describes playing a game of the 80s as playing a video game meant entering the unknowable world operating under confusing rules where anything could happen. I think that's just a really lovely way of putting that," Shouldice says. He even breaks out screenshots of an old notebook where he jotted down some of the juiciest parts of that feeling of mystery and adventure, including the idea that depth is to be discovered and explored, not doled out at the appropriate time.
He then goes on to break down the exact lifecycle of a secret, and how he applied it to Tunic's design process. "The lifecycle of a secret or really, learning about anything in the video games can be separated, I think [into] three phases, " he says.
"You start not knowing [something], that's the ignorance phase. And there's [the] knowledge [phase] where you know something exists, but you don't understand it. Then eventually, you do understand it. Understanding is closure. That's where something 'clicks.'
"You turn mystery into comprehension, [and it's] now a solved mystery. And this is not super tidy. And by the way, this is not empirical in the slightest. This is just sort of a way of
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