On Secrets

I was hoping I would be able to share something about a recent project, but it is still under wraps. Stay tuned!

I’m pretty good at keeping secrets. You ask me not to tell, I essentially partition that information away in a special vault in my memory. Eventually even I will be surprised by the news.

It’s tricky when I am working on something cool, but I’m forbidden to show anyone. I recently had to sign an NDA at work. Now I belong to a secret society who know about *It*.

In other news, I have secured three video testimonials about The Stork. I want to get one more and then cut together a promo video so I can launch the Kickstarter project. I’d like to get that going by the end of the month.

Prepping for Takeoff

I’ve got most of The Stork’s project page completed on Kickstarter. Their back end is really slick and full of helpful information on fundraising, promoting your project, etc. I’m used to shrouding The Stork in secrecy so that it is more fun to learn about it when you participate. But, obviously, in this situation, I need to give more details so people understand why they should contribute.

Kickstarter encourages the use of video to help people engage with your project on an emotional level. I’m gathering video testimonials of people who have participated in the past so I can cut together a promo. So far I have two really good testimonials and I’d like to get at least two more. Then I’ll throw in some graphics and music and put it up!

Kickstarted

Kickstarter fever was in the air. It seemed like every time I turned around, someone was posting about their new Kickstarter project on Facebook or Twitter. It seemed like a magical box where you put an idea in one end and an amazing thing came out the other. Somewhere in between a bunch of generous strangers dumped a bunch of money in there as well.

The excitement and success stories surrounding Kickstarter projects made me want to do it like the cool kids. But what would I do? Of course! I could do an expanded print run of The Stork, my… game…book…experiment…thing. Yes! Kickstarter was the perfect place for my weird idea of promoting random kindness. Continue reading →

Dune Sandstorm Board Concept

Before I decide on art or any of the other components, I need to tackle how I want the storm to work. In the original game, the sandstorm is represented by a small cardboard token that moves around the edge of the circular board. This is not very dramatic for how important a role it plays. It also fades into the background too much and is easy to overlook.

My idea is that the sandstorm should clearly overlay the entire segment of the board it is affecting. But how to do so without disrupting any pieces on that segment (in the safety of rock regions, for example)? I propose a layered board which is effectively one giant dial. The storm is printed on a transparent plastic disc sandwiched between another clear plastic layer (the actual board surface) and a base cardboard layer with the board art.

This way the sandstorm will move underneath the pieces on the board and clearly designate what area it affects.

Here is a mockup of the cross-section:

A fastener at the center would hold the three pieces in place but still allow the storm to rotate. There would also need to be some kind of adhesive at the four corners for stability, but also allow enough play for the storm to move easily.

The result would look like this:

As you can see, there would need to be sections cut out from each edge of the top frame to allow for access to the storm layer’s edge. My one concern is that it may be a bit clunky when moving the storm great distances.

I may further elaborate on this by printing the regions protected from the storm on the topmost plastic layer. This would provide a clear visual indication of which units are safe and which are destroyed.

Arrakis…Dune…Desert Planet

Like many designers who have played the out of print board game Dune, I have thought to myself, “I could make my own version of this.” Indeed, the image gallery on Board Game Geek is full of custom renditions of the game. It would be no problem to download some PDFs and print out a copy of the game, but I’d like to have a go at making my own artwork for it. Also, I have an interesting solution for the sandstorm I’d like to attempt.

So far, the project is in the planning stages. I have accumulated PDF components of the original game, reference artwork, and some links to sites which might provide game components which I will shape to my own purposes.

Most of the designs I have seen stick very closely to the components of the original, but I wonder if there aren’t alternatives to the combat wheel, for example. Beyond the physical aspects, I also feel like some of the more ridiculous mechanics (such as the whole blind bidding on Treachery cards) can be overhauled. We shall see.

Sleepless in Seattle

So one of my creative projects is my ongoing quest to find a girlfriend. I will go into more detail in a future post. This week is just the preamble, the tease. The real posts start next week.

Anyhow, one of my friends from my board game group suddenly got engaged. I’m not best buds with the guy or anything, not privy to the machinations of his private life. But still. Seems like I would have noticed someone he was about to marry. Turns out it was someone he had known for a while, but she lives in Seattle. And they decided to get married this coming July and he’s going to move out there. Just like that.

So another friend asks me if I found the love of my life but she lived somewhere else, wouldn’t I move there? Like what if she was from Ohio. Would I go back there? And I’m like “Fuck, I hope not. I hope it doesn’t come down to that.” I love Austin. I love my friends here. I don’t want to leave. She’d have to move here.

I mean, one of the main reasons I came here was to hopefully meet someone in Austin, the cool town with the Alamo Drafthouse. I don’t want to find out that, no, she’s actually kicking it in some Louisiana bayou or New York borough. I don’t think it is wrong to balance the fantastic with the pragmatic, the deep soul desire with the practicality of the everyday.

Unless, of course, some mirror cracks open or an alien shuttle craft lands and she’s like, “Hey, let’s bail on this whole planet Earth situation and go back to my place.” I’d be down with that.

Show and Tell

Last night my friends Jonathan and Sharon had a Show and Tell party at their house. It is an annual thing where friends gather to present projects they are working on or demonstrate talents. I used to be involved in the slam poetry scene and none of my Austin friends had ever seen me perform, so that’s what I decided to do. I still had two of the poems memorized. I guess I’ve done them enough that they’ve become etched into a ROM somewhere. The other two were on book.

One of the poems is always emotionally difficult to do, so I rarely read it. It’s a tricky thing: On the one hand, I want to read the poem over and over to get the emotional payload out of my system so that it won’t be a problem to do the piece. On the other hand, I’m talking about something real and personal and I don’t want to cheapen it into a performance. I made it through the poem with some difficulty. Apparently I will always have some tears left for the events that marked me most.

Set List:

  1. Some of the Parts
  2. My Girlfriend is So Fat
  3. Small Hands
  4. First Time Flowing

Now Don’t Get Excited

Although I’ve signed up for weekly blogging (the One A Day Lite package), I may sometimes write more than once per week. Gasp!

Alright, so on to the update. I’m working on several projects at the moment. Unfortunately the one that is nearest completion is one that I cannot discuss in detail as it is for a friend and he is keeping the project under wraps for now. But hopefully he’ll make an announcement in the near future and I can show you what I’ve been doing. Continue reading →

Netflix Gems of 2010

Netflix has been a huge part of my effort to declutter the media in my life. I have almost eliminated all physical DVDs from my “stuff”.

As you probably already know, Netflix Instant Watch is one of the greatest things ever. It’s how you know you’re in the 21st century. Each week it rises from an ocean of cinema and spreads a net of glittering gems recovered from the depths. Continue reading →

In the Grip of Terror

Anytime I embark upon a new project, I am almost immediately seized by fear. It is suddenly quite obvious that I wasn’t thinking clearly when I agreed to take on the project. It will likely be a disaster, a flaming slow motion spin out into a crowd of gaping onlookers. And then they’ll know. They’ll know that I’m a fraud who has been deceiving them all these years with claims of being a writer or an artist.

It is no use to present as evidence the hundreds of posts in my blog or the stories I have written or the many web sites I have designed. Those were flukes. Tricks. A bit of smoke and mirrors to disguise the fact that I have no idea how I’m doing any of it.

And this, of course, is part of the process. It means it’s working.

What you can expect from my One A Day contributions: At the very least you will find a weekly account of my progress and process in regards to various creative projects I am working on. Basically, I want to be sure that each week I have done something of consequence that advances my creative well being. This blog will help keep record of that.

Thus concludes the preamble. Onward!