"Game On, Python!"

Pitch- Marc Polidor

There is a lot of people in this world who struggle socially because they are either too afraid, or they get bullied because of what they look like or how they are as a person. What I want to show people by them playing my game is to show them that it’s ok to try to socialize to people because they can help you in the deep future when you really need someone there. The audience I’m trying to reach is any age because anyone can struggle socially because of what they are going through or the people around them. The game that I will create is about a boy named Kazuma, and he is struggling socially because he doesn’t like awkward situations and he’s not confident enough to start conversations. So everyday, Kazuma is struggling mentally because he’s bored and he nothing really excites him. So one day when he takes the train to go home, he makes a wish where he wished he could go to a different world. The call to adventure is when he gets home and a mysterious dragon cat created from his imagination offers him to travel to this “Different world” but its a randomized world that he’s seen before. He accepts the offer because he did wish for it, and what he did not know is that to leave that world, he has to defeat some beast and once he does, he will have the option to teleport back into the real world or stay. In this story,  the only way to succeed is by teaming up with people and working together to try and defeat the beast.

 

My only concerns for finishing the project is hopefully I get good enough in python so I can make my game as good as possible. Python can be hard sometimes but hopefully I can get through it and make it work.

1 Comment

  1. Jacquelyn Blain

    This is exactly where you need to be right now. Your story has a good start on the Aristotelian structure. Remember, too, that the whole story only needs to be 3-5 minutes long, which really isn’t very much. Look at the Text Box Template on the Announcements page; that should help you get started on writing the game narrative because it shows how choices work in a branching narrative.

    And yes, Python… I’m just glad I don’t have to do it! 🙂 You’ll be fine.

Leave a Reply