I HATE MOUNTAINS.COM

No camping. No marshmallows. No hope.

From the creators of Portal: Prelude

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The light at the end of the tunnel

* Posted by Marc / Moroes (permalink)

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Like we said on our Twitter feed a few days ago, we recently decided to restrain ourselves to a few deadlines. The work is nearly over (I know we're always saying that), the first deadline was 4 days ago, and we only missed it by a few days. Unfortunately, we still can't give any release date yet because we're waiting for Valve to fix the game (else we can't even play the campaign properly), but we're definitely seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.

What's left to do you may ask? Well, it kinda depends on our regular playtests (we always find a few things to tweak), but I'd say there's still the extraction vehicle to export as a Source engine model, the fourth map (Lumberyard) to polish a bit, a few tweaks to the navigation meshes, a few more particle systems, various small optimizations and then, the coop should be finished. But when I said we missed our last deadline by a few days, it wasn't really true. Most of our tasks are linked to a particular actor of the project and for some of them, there's no other way to proceed, it's not like anyone else could do the job. That why while Nicolas' still finishing the last tasks, I've already started to take care of the Versus side of the campaign.

You read well, we never really decided if we were going to implement a Versus mode or not (mostly because we don't care about versus), so the question was still on hold until a few days ago. We finally decided that we had to do it for the fans, but I need to warn everyone about something: we're definitely not going to deeply playtest versus. The campaign is playing good in coop mode, we're just providing space and paths for the infected to roam around. Basically, every map will have some special infected that won't play particularily well:

  • Forest: Works well for Smokers and Hunters, not really for Boomers
  • Manor: Works well for Smokers and Boomers, not really for Hunters
  • Underground: Works well for Smokers and Boomers, not really for Hunters
  • Lumberyard: Works well for Hunters and Boomers, not really for Smokers
  • Lakeside: Works well for the three of them

Finally, I'll repeat some of the things we already said recently: Why aren't we planning an open beta? Because that's not the way we work. Read about Agile software development and its "produce less, iterate more often" guidelines. Why is this taking so long to release? External people can't really understand how hard it is to come up with something like what we're doing when there's already hundreds of campaigns out there. We're not just building another campaign, we're building something from the ground up with a different approach. There's a bunch of other campaigns doing the same, and most of them are in development since shortly before I Hate Mountains. We know what we did, we know what we have to do, we know that the campaign is fully playable since months, but "playable" doesn't mean "finished" and even less "polished" or "bug-free".

"Stay positive guys, I have a good feeling about this!"

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Thursday, December 24, 2009

Clarification, campaign overview, screenshots and merry Christmas!

* Posted by Nicolas (permalink)

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Okay, I don't know for you and your country, but in France, we just entered Christmas Eve day. For a few days (probably more than two weeks), we'll keep silent and take a break with family. But before we leave, we wanted to say a few last things about the campaign.

We know it's taking a bit longer than expected to get this campaign done. In fact, this is taking way longer than expected. At first, we thought we could have a release for the end of the summer, eventually it didn't happen. Then, we thought we could do it for November, and we worked at a fairly sustained pace to keep up, but eventually it didn't happen either. Finally, we thought we could finally have a release for Christmas (that would have been awesome), but you guess it, it still won't happen for a number of reasons.

There was the great debacle of the Left 4 Dead Authoring Tools, that didn't helped us as soon and as much as expected since most (if not all) of the components Valve initially promised never showed up. But that's OK, we didn't really care anyway. Then, each one of us got back to work or school after summer, and as we're all at the beginning of our professional life or at the end of our scholar life, it consumes a lot of our time. But that's OK, we could bare with it. Finally, there was the big disappointment and excitation around the release of Left 4 Dead 2, which sucked up a lot of our time and motivation and brings us to the second point.

To be honest, at that point, we really thought it was time for us to give up. Until a week ago, as a leader I wasn't really sure if we were still headed somewhere at all. We saw the numbers, we saw Left 4 Dead 1 leaking players faster than ever, we saw it fall behind Counter-Strike: Condition Zero, the Garry's Mod, and even regularly Day of Defeat: Source, which hasn't even been supported for years (July 2008). Even us weren't playing Left 4 Dead 1 anymore, that really frightened us to hell to think that our project was already obsolete before its completion. Valve really didn't left us enough time to build something serious.

For your information, on the official Left 4 Dead Mailing List a few beta-testers are talking about the upcoming Left 4 Dead 2 SDK. Let's be honest, for the moment it looks particularly promising, but then again, if we really want to be honest, the SDK of the first one looked promising too and nothing happened. For a while, we considered switching to Left 4 Dead 2, finish our campaign and wait for the SDK to be released (OK damn, the SDK was released while I was writing this news, so... everything might change again, except the following statement). Don't freak out though, because we made our decision. I Hate Mountains will be released on Left 4 Dead 1 or won't be.

Okay, now that things are getting clearer, here's a bit of information about our progress. Basically, it's finished. Now, when I say "it's finished" I mean that the whole campaign is complete and playable. That doesn't mean the campaign is ready to be released, it means that we're entering the polishing stage. We have this huge folder full of bugshots (screenshots of bugs) to fix, we need to tweak the navigation of bots and infected, we need to throw a few animations here and there, and more importantly, we need to test it full-scale. We know for sure that the gameplay works quite well, but it won't hurt anyone.

Wooo, that was quite a long news. Now that you're all bored, you may need some new materials to cheer you up. So here's one overview and 20 new action screenshots of the last two maps, taken from of our last playtest.

I Hate Mountains Complete Campaign Overview (spoilers ahead, 875 KB). Now you can see how much work has gone into building different paths and ensure good re-playability.
Complete Campaign Overview

20 brand new action screenshots taken from the Lumberyard and Lakeside level during our last playtest (no spoilers here, don't worry).



















Until next time, Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year from the I Hate Mountains Team!

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Sunday, October 4, 2009

Fresh news from the front

* Posted by Geoffroy (permalink)

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It's been a while since we last gave you some real news about the content of the campaign itself and most of you had been pretty patient until now. We never stopped working on the campaign, but we're not working on it full-time either, so it takes some time. You already know that the first, second and third maps are finished ; it still need a few tweaks here and there, but nothing really hard to do. Lately, there was some huge progress on the fourth and fifth levels too.

For the moment Geoffroy and Marc are working hard on these fourth and fifth levels while Nicolas is waiting for them to finish in order to create the navigation meshes and link everything together. These last two maps are almost finished, we're probably somewhere around 85 or 90% of completion. In this article, we'll focus a bit more on the Lumberyard level, right after Underground, where survivors are back to fresh air. We could also talk about the final Lakeside level but... we kinda want to keep some mystery around this one in order to avoid spoiling too much.

As we said in previous articles, we try to care a lot about details and background while building the campaign. It gives a better credibility and allows a better immersion in the apocalyptic Left 4 Dead universe (that's probably why it takes time to build). Until now, Lumberyard's pictures showed a massive exodus, a mountain road and... contaminated people finding their way through the exodus and starting a panic event. Where were these people headed ? That was the mistery. They were trying to reach a lumberyard, transformed in a heavily defended, mobile, state-of-the-art evacuation and decontamination center by the military.

When survivors finally reach the lumberyard, everyone's already gone through the backyard's road and all is left are the remaining people that thought they could find their salute here too... but were a bit too late. Geoffroy tried to give all these building a realistic touch, trying to build what could look like a real lumberyard. Honestly, we don't really know how a lumberyard is supposed to work, probably like 95% of our future players, but still. We think it's important to add some credibility.

This map is also a huge optimisation challenge, since it's completely open and offers a lot of paths to the end. For the moment, everything's still going fine and we can finally see the end of the tunnel. So, stay tuned for more developer stuff until the release that we hope will occur before Left 4 Dead 2. If that's not the case, we don't know what we'll do and it will only depend on how much of that promised inter-operability Valve managed to built in before the launch.

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Monday, July 6, 2009

Hang on tight!

* Posted by Nicolas (permalink)

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We know it's been seriously quiet there since mid-may regarding new materials, but don't panic! We'll have plenty of new things to announce in the upcoming weeks. No, not a release date unfortunately, but some crusty details about the manor (exterior detailling stuff), the lumberyard (progress stuff), the lakeside (progress stuff), the forest (gameplay stuff) and the underground (ambience stuff).

And if you're patient enough, we might even release some details about the music and a super-secret-new-poster-because-the-current-is-not-cool-enough. But shhht! Nothing's really fixed for the moment. If you're really patient, we might even whine and lament on one or two things (one of them beeing Valve, of course)!

Stay tuned for more developer banter coming soon!

Edit: As you may have noticed it, there's still no news for the moment. The reason is simple, I suffered a very bad lungs accident a few weeks ago and had to be hospitalized for a while. I'm now in the process of cancelling my trip to USA next month because of the damn utterly expensive american medical system :D
I can't take the risk of beeing indebted for the rest of my life for the moment.

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Finally, a poster and a lumberyard

* Posted by Marc / Moroes (permalink)

18 comment(s)

When we began to think about a campaign title and a slogan, we naturally tried to highlight our montainous environment with a catchy title, just like every official campaign. Once the title and slogan found, the second step was the creation of a movie poster, an essential step for every Left 4 Dead campaign, because this will probably be the first thing people will see before downloading it. With his artwork/photoshop/drawing skills, Geoffroy decided to work alone on this task using the photoshop poster template built by Adam "Supernorn" Riches. Once the global layout fixed, we all had a meeting to discuss every little detail of the poster and compare a good dozen of different versions.

This poster wasn't unveiled until then simply because the website design already uses it to some extent. It allowed us to start releasing material without repeating the same error than most custom campaigns seems to do. Which means, find an idea, make a kickass poster, don't show anything more for two months and reward people with a few crappy screenshots that don't even match the campaign poster. Now that everybody seems to know what we're doing, it's time to unveil our poster:

But unveiling the poster is also and above all an opportunity to talk a bit more about the campaign, and especially the fourth map which ressemble the poster the most. Lumberyard begins when underground ends (what a surprise), after travelling through a long underground tunnel system, the survivors finally reach fresh air again using the railway passing through the mountain. While walking in this fourth map, you'll realize very quickly where you are (vertically talking) and this is also where the mountainous background at the origin of the title of the campaign will make its greatest appearance.

Walking through the fourth map, you'll have to travel along a lakeside road, inspired by Canadian landscapes. This road is larger than most roads you'll have already faced during the campaign, these are not forest trails anymore, and this one is scattered with corpses and multiple car crashes. It seems to have been used for a mass exodus who went terribly wrong. Then, what happened? In the distance, along the lake, some buildings stand out from the horizon: the sawmill. Why do they all seemed to head for this installation? This is what you'll have to discover when the campaign will be ready to play.

From the developer viewpoint, Geoffroy, who is in charge of the level, always tries to keep a significant coherence. This credibility problem is reflected through the architecture of the level and the placement of the various buildings and props. Thus, the sawmill was entirely built for the sake of realism even before it had a gameplay layout. It may seem like a controversial way of building a map, but lumberyard was entirely imagined this way, the gameplay often adapts to the environment and not the opposite. Each 3D prop, each car on the road, each bush and tree was scattered in a realistic way, which is kind of our main goal with this campaign after all. We're trying to put a bit more design work than what Valve did with the poorly designed survival maps released with the recent update (who said smoky rocks, invisible walls and uncrossable 2 foot height fences?). Just kidding, we love you Valve <3

Witches hates buses

Stay tuned for more developer banter until the release.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

What the hell is this all about ? (bis)

* Posted by Nicolas (permalink)

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Here we are. Almost half a year passed since we began communicating on our previous project Portal: Prelude, and we believe it's time to unveil our next plans. Welcome to IHateMountains.com!
Beware, the following is a shameless copy of the about page.

What? You hate mountains?

I Hate MountainsNo, it's not a joke, and no, we don't really hate mountains (only Francis does).
"I Hate Mountains" is the name of a brand new Left 4 Dead campaign made by three french friends. This campaign is built the Valve way, we are not trying to revolutionize anything, we just want to provide more content to this awesome game.
Read ahead to learn more about it.

Why are we doing it?

Because we friggin' love this game.
We are playing Left 4 Dead together since the early days, during the Festival du Jeu-Vidéo in Paris, in 2008 (before the release). We played this game so much and always on the same campaigns that we believe it needs fresh new content, quickly.

More details on the campaign

The I Hate Mountains campaign is divided into 5 different maps, just like Valve did with their own campaigns.

ForestForest
Our survivors crashed their bus in an utility pole of this dark mountain forest while fleeing. They must now find their way through the trees.
ManorManor
Now that the survivors managed to get out of the forest, they must reach the highest point of this manor and try to launch a distress call from the radio.
UndergroundUnderground
Escaped from the manor, the survivors are now fleeing though an old system of caves and tunnels running through the mountain.
LumberyardLumberyard
Freshly escaped of this oppressing cave system, our survivors are now looking for help and rescue in the lumberyard nearby.
LakesideLakeside
Fleeing the now infected and deserted lumberyard, the survivors are now stuck and eagerly waiting to be rescued by whoever could see their signal.

Who are we?

Mostly people from the Portal: Prelude team.
We are three friends with a professional, a student and an amateur background of the videogame industry. Check out the Meet the team page for more details.

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