Project 1 Dev Journal| Finding Solitude

This project started with a simple word-association brainstorm. I tried to think of as many potential identities for scenes as I could, focusing on both environmental and affective or atmospheric characteristics. I then moved into combining different identities and coming up with simple scenes for each of them, ending up with about five different scenes. However, the scenes I was thinking of and sketching out were narrative or interaction driven. It  was hard to think about a static scene with the sole interaction of looking.

A whiteboard with the word association exercise and small diagrams of potential scenes.
initial brainstorm whiteboard


Stuck for a moment, I started thinking about Kentucky Route Zero and the ideas of scenography that Kemenczy talked about as I pulled up images and environments from games that I’ve played or heard about because of their affective qualities. From there I tried to draw a conceptual line through the affective qualities from those games and the scenes that had started to take shape from the brainstorm and landed on solitude. At this point, I started to compile images from the games, abstract and conceptual art regarding solitude, and textures which evoked solitude into a Pinterest board.

Drawing on Gabriel Garcia Marquez’ 100 Years of Solitude, I tried to understand how these environments depicted solitude as opposed to being alone, that is, to visually imply the choice to be alone. Games like Red Dead Redemption, Alan Wake, and The Long Dark do so primarily through playing with space and place.. While the characters’ outfits can imply a decision to isolate out of necessity, so too does the simple empty expanses, the shear amount of space that these games cover. After enough time spent wandering in any of these games, those in between spaces start to feel like a place themselves, a place of solitude, where the world reflects the underlying reality of the characters’ lives. Without the ability to move through a large expanse for several hours, however, I turned back to Marquez’ magical realism techniques, where physical reality and experiential reality have no boundary. With this in mind, I tried to think of the home of someone seeking solitude, and the scene took shape.

A pencil drawing of the first sketch of the scene.
first pen sketch of the scene

The scene takes place in a cave. A waterfall flowing upwards covers the entrance of the cave. On the floor in front of the user are a sleeping roll and burning campfire, its smoke curling up and covering the ceiling. The back section of the cave has been sculpted into dozens of animal heads, with the tools lying on the ground with the rubble from the work. Stacked against one side of the cave is wood, as much as can be comfortably held, with an axe leaning against the stack. Strips of dried meat are fitted into the cracks of the wood pile. On the opposite wall is a tally, implying the number of days the user has spent in the cave. On the floor are several wooden figurines, practice pieces for the animals on the back of the cave. On the other side of the waterfall, obscured from the user’s view is a frozen, moonlit lake with dozens of silhouettes, their glowing eyes staring into the cave.

6 different 360 degree story boards.
story boards of the scene from multiple user positions


There should be several interactions, but after the feedback session, I have decided to play with the density of the waterfall and the smoke so that the silhouette’s and the glowing eyes are slightly visible but obscured.

With the concept and structure figured out, I pulled enough assets form the unity store and now have to begin making the scene.

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