
Here's what I taught my class how to make in #Blender the other day! I think it turned out really well 
Next up
#Devruary Day 18: Which game dev inspires you most?
I'm really inspired by the developers behind No Man's Sky, Hello Games. They never gave up on their game after a failed launch, and made free updates for 10 years turning it into an amazing game today! 
#Devruary Day 9: What's your favorite part of game dev? As I've mentioned before, I love being able to create my own worlds to explore!
I also really like sound design, it's a fun way to add a lot of detail to the experience.
#Devruary Day 4: What keeps you making games when it gets tough?
I love creating worlds (just like the games I mentioned inspiring me), so sometimes the motivation is being able to see those worlds come together and explore them myself! 
Happy #WIPWednesday! Are you working on a game? Making some art? Practicing a song? Something else? Tell us in the comments!
#Devruary Day 10: How do you usually plan a game dev project?
I often make checklists and sketches on physical paper and white boards, and I also prototype the game.
Happy #WIPWednesday! Are you working on a game? Making some art? Practicing a song? Something else? Tell us in the comments!
#Devruary Day 10: What's your least favorite part of game dev?
Ngl, although I can do it, coding is the least enjoyable part of game dev to me
Even with visual scripting tools it can be hard... Pictured some code from my game Rivet 
#Devruary Day 4: How Did You Learn Game Dev? I learned game dev by playing around in Construct 2 and figuring out what everything does. And to this day I'm using that same engine to make the game "You're Not Welcome to Rennville" with @Lit-Lore-Studios
!
#Devruary Day 16: What feature almost broke your game?
Moving things in pixels per second almost broke our game... When testing the game at 120fps everything moved in double time, so I had to add extra math to each line of code to calculate frame rate 


















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