Loading...
474
3 years ago

Thank you so much everyone for 500 followers! 🥳 Next stop, 1000!

Animation made in #Blender




15 comments

Loading...

Next up

#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.

I also use the projects feature on GitHub to track tasks

Made this other-world scene in #Blender yesterday to use as a background on my website I'm making! Somewhat inspired by No Mans Sky I quite like the way it turned out, especially for only a few hours of work What do you think?

#Devruary Day 8: What engine are you using in your current game? I'm currently working on two different games, for my puzzle game What Was Found at Ravenhill I'm using Visionaire Studio. For the game "You're Not Welcome to Rennville I'm using Construct 2

Yippee, wahoo, yaheeeee!

Little something I put together in Blender and Krita for #Mar10 Day, 2026.

#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

Happy #WIPWednesday! Are you working on a game? Making some art? Practicing a song? Something else? Tell us in the comments!

#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!

#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.

@MidnightForge is a Jolter to Watch and the solo horror dev behind games like Those Who Dwell and Nowhere! Follow @MidnightForge and the Those Who Dwell game page before the quest ends on March 17 and you'll get Coins!

#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