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THE MAGICAL FOREST. Ken Leung. Overview. Enable users in the play area to collaboratively populate a lush, eclectic, thriving magical forest teeming with flora and fauna. Why?.
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THE MAGICAL FOREST Ken Leung
Overview Enable users in the play area to collaboratively populate a lush, eclectic, thriving magical forest teeming with flora and fauna.
Why? The physical space is lushly inundated with accents and examples of nature (wooden walls, plants, aquarium, wood trim, stone floors, wooden sculpture, dark green furniture ...) and sounds of nature (babbling water)The virtual environment should accentuate, ratherthan conflict with, this natural lushness. If the room has so many things that originated from a forest, why not complete the context with a illusory virtual forest within the screen?
Considerations Experience should be immersive and engaging ... but not addictive User should be rewarded for their interactions through an virtual ‘imprint’ of their activities, which will remain in the game environment for a short time Experience should take into account the needs of children without disabilities, children in wheelchairs, and children with other disabilities (autism, epilepsy)
Basic interface Carpeted play area, separated into 10x10 grid of on/off ‘buttons’
Basic Interaction Children step onto a button to germinate the ‘growth‘ of a flora or natural object item (trees, bushes, boulders) on the corresponding tile in the 3D game environmentChild’s position in the environment will be denoted by a set of footprints. If child remains on button, the object will grow until it reaches ‘maturity’ Once it reaches maturity, it pauses for about 10 seconds, and begins to glow, brighter and brighter until it ‘metamorphizes‘ into a forest spirit (cloud of particles)which wanders around the space, fading gradually over the next 2 minutes.
Flora & Objects Flora and natural objects are ‘grown’ by users by ‘feeding’ one tile (i.e. remaining standing on it) Flora: Trees Bushes Grasses Mushrooms Mosses Objects:BouldersPebble Patches Puddles
Flora & Objects Flora or object generated is random for a given grid square (you might get a pine tree one time, and maple tree the next) - variety is key, to construct an interesting forest User must remain on the square to make it continuously grow, otherwise it will regress (reverse its growth)If a user doesn’t like the current object, they just need to hop off the square and then hop on again!
As flora and objects grow, they: Change in size (small->large) Change in ‘morphology’ (sapling -> tree) Change in color (dull -> colorful)
Extra ‘perks’ for children in wheelchairs, that reverses the stigma of their disability (e.g. 4-tile-large objects reserved just for them)Alternate growth behaviors for different body postures and movements?(lying down, rolling, running around)
Fauna Fauna are a background element -- little animals that are attracted to a ‘healthy‘ forest. As the forest becomes more lush and populated, more fauna will appear and interact with the flora (reward for user)Examples: Bees, Flies, Slugs, Birds, Squirrels Butterflies, Tree Fairies
Creating An ‘Imprint’ Mature Flora Forest Spirit Metamorphosis
Creating An ‘Imprint’ Once a user’s object reaches maturity, it will begin to metamorphose into a a forest spirit (a cloud of glowing particles), which will meander around the virtual spaceThis is the virtual imprint of the user’s interaction, and is the ‘crescendo’, the payoff It is something that the child can sit and watch in wonder, helping them ‘wind down’ from the experience
Sounds Natural background noises (leaves rustling, wind blowing)Sounds of fauna as they arrive in the space -- a ‘healthy’ forest create be a cacaphony of animal sounds. (birds singing, crickets chirping) Complements nicely with the babbling brook (i.e. the fishtank) in the physical space
Issues 3D perspective -- objects in the front blocking objects in the back -- use translucency?
- how to generate a lush forest without ‘using up’ user squares- how to