capybara5141 @capybara5141

Loading...I use dense forest foliage as a natural boundary to guide player exploration. I created a custom PCG tool that lets me toggle between blockout and final meshes—super useful for jumping between layout and visual testing in gameplay.

Loading...In Lobo, I use foreshadowing to keep the gameplay rhythm going. A quiet moment, a fallen hunter, and a new weapon you can equip but not use yet, just enough to tease what’s coming next.
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Loading...Tutorials in Lobo are optional, easy to skip, and only cover key mechanics that aren’t obvious. They’re brief and direct, and yes! They break immersion, but that’s intentional: quick info bites help you immediately apply what you learn.
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Loading...One of the hardest parts of game design is teaching players. In Lobo, I chose to break immersion a bit for clear, fast tutorials, no long hand-holding, just quick lessons that get you into action fast. Which do you prefer: immersion or quick guidance?
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Loading...For Lobo, I wanted simple settings. No ray tracing or upscalers so it runs on any PC. Inspired by The Last of Us Part II, I added my own touch.
Essentials: resolution, volume, rebind keys, camera, and language.
What settings matter most to you?
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