Category:JvlS

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J'ai vu le Soleil (I saw the Sun) J'ai vu le Soleil is a first person puzzle and labyrinth game, with a strong anti-consumerism message and a very dark disposition.

Writing

History

From poem to movie, to game

This game was not a game at first, it was a poem. (translation to come)

Le grincement de la balançoire. Le son strident d’un métal érodé gémissant de douleur sous le poids des rires. L’odeur du sable sale et humide. La douceur glacée de la nacelle contre mes jambes nues. La poussière dans mes cheveux. Ma main qui sentait la rouille. La sensation de beauté absolue lorsque la balancelle atteint son apogée ; un instant éternel avant le retour sur terre.

Alors que le monde tournait encore, comme un boulet de canon en plein chœur ; j’ai vu le soleil. Les dernières pluies coulaient alors, comme un supplice perdu dans la neige ; j’ai vu le soleil. C’était une cité sans fin ni frontière. Un monde sans habitant. Un soleil brûlant et mort. J’ai poussé la porte, la première devant moi, et j’ai vu la mer. Les autres riaient encore. J’ai vu la mer se jeter de faim, engloutir la plage dans ses moindres recoins. Le sable blanc, brûler mes pieds. Le sel acide caresser mes joues. Mes mains comme des sirènes assoiffées. Mes genoux en sang de me voir pleurer.

La porte était ouverte, je voulais regarder. La porte était fermée. La cité sous la nuit. Il y avait une autre porte. Un étrange bâtiment marbré. J’ai poussé la porte pour mieux respirer. J’ai vu le soleil. Il était gris bleu et il était rayé. Le carrelage était froid. La musique toute morcelée. Les adultes parlait. Les verres chantaient. Le feu dansait, de son goût fumé. Le feu pleurait de me voir marcher.

Avec le vent, la porte a claqué. La nuit s’était levée ; la cité était dorée. Je me souviens de toi, avait murmuré une voix. Je me souviens de toi. Je me souviens. Je m’étais retourné, la voix s’en était allée.

Dans un couloir étroit, un bateau avait échoué. Je poussais l’écoutille pour aller nager. L’eau était noir sang. La baignoire débordait doucement. Un néon jaune et bleu scintillait. J’ai vu le soleil mais il s’est éclipsé. Je me souviens du bateau en papier qui avait coulé. L’odeur humide de l’encre me mentait. J’étais un avion et je tombais.

De la cité, il ne restait plus que l’entrée. Une petite porte, marquée sortie. Le soleil a disparu. Derrière la porte, il ne reste que la nuit. Derrière la porte...

This at first led to the idea of a short film, with a shadow as a hero, in a metaphorical city, with a fishing boat in the middle of the street... and from there, the idea started to evolve so much, it became a notion, not a story, not a medium, but a feeling of loneliness and abandonment that had to be told.

A game is a game is a game

The moment I started trying to make a game, I tried to create J'ai vu le Soleil. The game, then, was very different, it was only an infinite street, that played with time a little (may be, this will be in the final game, who knows), but it was something far too complex for a first game.

It became a vague idea of a supermarket about a year later, and then, after starting development on the Beta of Cutie, this is starting to take form, shape, and a structure for an actual game... possibly a good one.

The fire crying to know me standing

There are a few events that coincided with my envy for doing this, both as some sort of blog/wiki thing, to help me remember all the ideas, the good, the bad, the ugly; but also, to jump start the process of thinking about actually making this game. Right now, I'm wrapping up coding on Cutie, and the game itself lacks levels but is otherwise mostly good to go. So, as every indy who's ever lived, I'm thinking about totally something else instead of finishing the first game.

Influences

Gameplay

The gameplay is heavily influenced by Amnesia - A Machine for Pigs. I liked the puzzles as well as the mood of the game. I'd like J'ai vu le Soleil to be set in a more modern setting, to be creepy, but with everyday life occurrences and contexts.

There is a good part coming from Everybody's gone to the Rapture especially once you're outside the mall. Its open world carefully crafted for you to follow a specific path.

It's also influence by The Stanley Parable in this that it is a simple gameplay. There is no tedious task to accomplish.

There are a lots of mini-games and possibilities, achievements. All of them end up in a game over, telling you that this is not that kind of game. If you game over in all the possible games, you get an alternative ending where you get scolded for having waisted so much of your time on the game.

Narrative

Undertale has a great narrative story. Takes the counterpart of what's usually expected of the gamer.

Music

  • Olafur Arnalds

Names

These are names for the shops, they are from various sources, but all link back to the theme of capitalism and illusion.

  • Shell Beach (Dark City)
  • John Galt airline (Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand)
  • Screwtape hardware store (C.S. Lewis)
  • Ellsworth Grove and Toohey Lane (The Fountain Head - Ayn Rand)

The game in itself

First, I'd like to make a game that I would love to play. Me, not being a gamer, I come to this game designing business a bit of a nooby-know-it-all; and truth be told, that's often were I find my own creativity.

A moral game

As a rule, I try never to make a game about killing. To me, games, like movies, are a good place to offer the opportunity for introspection and for a-priories bashing.

J'ai vu le Soleil should not be an exception to the rule. It will not feature zombies, but shall feel like it does. It shall feel like you're walking on your own grave, and ask the difficult questions of consumerism, modernism; the questions about the future (I heard David Wong say once, that we, as a people who watches to many post-apocalyptic movies, have turn into people who do not believe in a positive future at all), of course, matters of ecology both environmental and internal.

I would like this game to fuck with your mind so hard, it will make you change not the way you see games, but the way you live. It will make you question truths, politics, authority and mainly yourself.

One of the core ideas of this game as always been and shall remain the question: "Are you playing the game, or is it playing you?"

There be dragons

The space of the game is important. By that I mean, there is a physical space of the game.

It starts in the supermarket, when the doors close, at night, and you're trapped there and it turns into a maze. It might feel like the whole game is happening in this supermarket, but once you're done with the maze, you discover the mall.

The rules that have led you here, do not apply any longer. You are now in another space, with other rules. You are for all intent and purposes in an other game. There are different shops, with various purposes, they interact with you and you interact with them. Even the toilets are the place for a lesson and will make you think. The mall is a surrealistic place (see below).

Then, when you have found the exit, you are in the industrial zone. That a whole other game again. Open wide space. Shops every where. Neons off. Night time in the worst place humanity as come up with. It feels an looks at times like the ruins of a concentration camp. There is, a tower, a transmission tower, looking like a water tower from the seventies. Looking like it's going to fall appart. From there, you can see the nuclear plant, spewing its vapours into the night. If you won, you can now see it just shut down, and all the lights of the distant city go dark... after a moment, you will find the beauty of the night sky will be the only thing left and you can still play the game, go down the tower, walk the parking lot, while the end credits are playing and the music is telling you that may be, humanity can survive now.

But if you lost, you'll be the witness to the explosion of the nuclear plant. You'll now be able to walk the everything while the end credits are playing, but this time, under an nuclear winter snow. The music will be more dramatic.

Path of least resistance

Going from place A to place B in the game has pretty much always two paths, the one is easy, requires brute force, going straight on, burning and pillaging.

The other one, necessitates the use of moral, careful planning, and attention to detail.

Zugzwang

Some places in the game are best travelled by not moving and not doing anything.

The first person gig

The mind puzzles

Surrealistic space

In this game, I'm looking for a principal space, the space of the mall, to be a starting point, an anchor to the real.

But behind some doors, down some escalators, you will find the unexpected, the unexpectable: Fields of grass and lumber with a shed-house in the middle, in which the mall leaves, landfills of perfectly functional products, polluted tropical beaches.

Some playable video-games in the game store, will impact the actual space of the game.

Even the maze will change shape when you're not watching.

Playing with time

Environments

The Mall

The mall is a labyrinth.

The loop home

The Dump

The broken Forest of your dark thoughts

The Cyber Church

Shell Beach

Pripyat

The Parking lot is abandoned. Nature has taken back its right over concrete and asphalt alike.

You are alone here. All the shops around are lit with flickering, broken down neon signs. They look as appealing as a closed asylum. There is nothing in them but vast, empty shelves. Some of them are opened, other are cardboarded or closed. It feels like this has had it's glory days and now, it's barely surviving.

There is a fast food chain of some sort. It's the one thing that seems not opened because it's too late, but still functional. You can buy something from its vending machines.

There is a relay tower, form the 70's atop a hill, you are drown there. It's an horrible piece of architecture, you wonder how it can still stand. The fence is open and you can climb in it. The stairs are endless and there is graffiti on the walls, spelling out a story. The story of a giant who ate it all and then died of starvation.

At the very top, a room filled with antiquated machinery. Almost like an old space station. Through the window, you can see the nuclear power-plant.

Yggdrasil

Puzzles

System

Art

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