Virtuos GDC 2011

Virtuos GDC 2011

Virtuos is one of the world's largest providers of digital production services to the game and movie industries, specializing in 3D art and game co-development. Virtuos has over 600 staff across its production centers in Shanghai and Chengdu, and offices in Paris, Vancouver and Tokyo.

Serving 15 of the top 20 games publishers worldwide, as well as renowned developers, Virtuos has developed full games on PS3, Xbox 360, Wii, NDS and PSP for leading publishers.

Visit us today at virtuosgames.com

Latest News
spacer View All spacer
 
March 20, 2011
 
Sony Aiming For Same Day Downloadable Release For All NGP Retail Games [22]
 
Angry Birds Maker Rovio Aiming For U.S. Stock IPO In Next Five Years [8]
 
Zynga Absorbs Floodgate Team Into Boston Office
spacer
Latest Features
spacer View All spacer
 
March 20, 2011
 
arrow Forty-Five Minutes With Five Minutes [2]
 
arrow Postmortem: Mediatonic's Monsters (Probably) Stole My Princess [1]
 
arrow Meet The Man Behind The Move [1]
spacer
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
March 20, 2011
 
GDC Weirdfest 2011 [1]
 
Rats! - A day in a MMO hero's life [1]
 
A Problem Solution: Standardized Work [5]
 
Amnesia: The Dark Descent: Birth of a Monster - Part 2.
 
Sony and Nintendo Don't Even Understand The Threat They Face [35]
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
March 20, 2011
 
Infinity Ward / Activision
Game Designer - Scripter
 
Magic Pixel Games
Producer
 
Infinity Ward / Activision
Senior Software Engineer
 
Rockstar New England
Environment Artists
 
Visceral Games Redwood Shores
Executive Producer
 
Activision
Manager – Manager, Marketing Communications
spacer
Latest Press Releases
spacer View All     RSS spacer
 
March 20, 2011
 
Hi-Rez Studios Pledges 100% of Global Agenda...
 
Three cheers and a bottle o‘ rum! Seafight...
 
URGENT: Press Release. Big Head Games Ltd., London...
 
Paradox Interactive supports the Japan Earthquake ...
 
New L.A. Noire Screenshots: The High Life of Los...
spacer
About
spacer News Director:
Leigh Alexander
Features Director:
Christian Nutt
Senior News Editor:
Kris Graft
Advertising:
John 'Malik' Watson
Recruitment/Education:
Gina Gross
 
Feature Submissions
 
Comment Guidelines
Sponsor
News

  GDC 2011: Mark Cerny Discusses Marble Madness' Turbulent Development
by Kyle Orland
5 comments
Share on Twitter
Share on Facebook RSS
 
 
March 4, 2011
 
GDC 2011: Mark Cerny Discusses  Marble Madness ' Turbulent Development
As a teenager, gamer and burgeoning programmer growing up in the early '80s, Mark Cerny says he envisioned fame and fortune coming from his dream career in the game industry. But the development of Marble Madness at the end of arcade gaming's golden age didn't quite work out that way, he said.

“If I could just get one penny out of that quarter, that's be, like, millions of dollars,” he recalled thinking as a youngster, speaking during his 'classic postmortem' session at GDC 2011 in San Francisco on Friday.

Unfortunately, the actual economics of the arcade industry, with marked-up cabinets beings sold through to distributors and operators, meant it didn't quite work that way. “We made the game, but we wouldn't get those quarters.”

But the more galling part, for Cerny, was that he got no public credit as Atari's 16,000th employee. “We were forbidden from telling people we were making these games,” he recalled somewhat bitterly. Even when EA ported the game to Amiga, the two programmers working on the port were featured on the packaging, because Atari wouldn't let Cerny and his team be publicized as the creators.

The good news about the arcade industry, though, was the creators' direct involvement with the games. Everyone was a programmer, designer and artist in one, and their destiny was controlled by the direct success of their games in a bustling marketplace, not by nonexistent marketing dollars.

But the downside of this model was a form of “monetization hell” in which two out of three games were cancelled near completion thanks to poor performance at their first location test. Such was the case for Cerny's first title, an unreleased tile-shifting and duck-guiding game called QWAK!, which is now playable on MAME.

The market necessitated that Cerny's next game be totally unique in both concept and controls, he said. It also needed to be a two-player game, because two coins meant double the profits, a necessity during the mid-crash year of 1983, when sales were down as much as 90 percent across the arcade industry.

He loved the 3D graphics being shown in games like Battlezone and I, Robot, but felt the games were too floaty and too undetailed, respectively. He strived to make the first arcade game with “solid and clean” 3D graphics, and was only somewhat annoyed when colleague Franz Lanzinger did it first with his game Crystal Castles.

Inspired by mini-golf, Cerny first thought of a game that let players use a touch-screen to place bumpers and guide a ball around the course, an underdeveloped idea that was universally hated around Atari. His second idea involved a two-player marble racing game with motorized trackballs that would actually spin in conjunction with the ball on screen, so you could feel the speed under your palm.

Both these ideas got lost during the development process – the competitive races ended up being won or lost based on annoyingly minute differences in play, and the motorized trackball system wasn't physically workable.

A plan for dynamic playfields, with bumps and obstacles that chased the player, was also canned before release, because “it had a weird rat under the rug feel to it,” Cerny recalled. Breakable glass supports, black hole traps and teeter-totters similarly ended up on the cutting room floor for one reason or another.

The key to the game's clean 3D graphics was a clever system that combined the bet of RAM-based vector graphics and ROM-based raster graphics, Cerny said. The final implementation required a combination of hand-drawn tiles to represent intersecting planes and computationally-generated ray-tracing that gave the grid a smooth, shaded look. Clever shadows placed on some tiles game a good illusion of depth to many level element, as wells.

Just before release, Cerny recalls Atari wanted to add a smiley face to the actual marble, to give the game an identifiable, Pac-man-like main character. “I wanted to do this abstract Escher-esque game where nothing had eyes, and here they were saying 'That's not a marble, that's a happy face!” They ended up with a compromise where the cabinet showed a marble with a subtle hint of a smile, but no identifiable face.

When the game finally shipped in December of 1984, it sold 4,000 units – low by the standards of a few years prior, but high enough to be the best-seller of the year. It was the number one-earner for six weeks straight in 18 arcades Atari tracked, Cerny said, but dropped off in every one during week seven because, as Cerny says, “it's a four minute game.” Looking back, he wonders why he didn't do a little extra work to add more levels and make an eight-minute game that may have been a more long-lived earner.

Comparing game development back then to development today, Cerny regretted that there are now fewer games with an old-school small scope. “You got one concept – asteroids and a spaceship, go! – and we were in an environment that required that commitment to that idea,” he said.
 
   
 
Comments

Kale Menges
profile image
I'm a big fan of old school small scope. My current personal project is an effort at capturing that same ideal. I think with the success of app-based games becoming harder and harder for the industry to ignore and with how mainstream the supporting platforms are, the idea of smaller scoped design should be more attractive to a greater number of developers, independent or otherwise. "Masterpiece" is not synonymous with "epic", nor will it ever be.



Joe McGinn
profile image
Nice article, interesting story. Can't agree with the final paragraph though. Ever here of the iPhone? There are more independent developers working on simple games now than probably any time in the last 25 years.



Abel Bascuñana Pons
profile image
I only want to say: thanks Mark and all the people involved in creating this game. I played it on arcade in the "Parc de Montjuic" of Barcelona in 1988, with its track ball controller (i recall spinning it like a madman to control the marble movement... hence the title of the game i guess!), and also the Sega Megadrive version in the early 90's.

The coolest thing about the game was the tension it was able to generate within seconds due to the measuared obstacles that required a great skill to overcome, the tight timer that obligued you to try to surpass the obstacles as fast as possible (how many deads on precipices trying to get that curve at max speed!), and the inertia of the ball that added that component of uncertainty and luck... no to forget the oppressive music that added to the global tension.

A masterpiece of game design, even it was really hardcore!



Bart Whitebook
profile image
I remember the prototype bowling ball sized trackball in one of the Atari labs back in those days... Mark was one of the programmer/designers who still had a teenagers' speed and reflexes to really exercise the levels to their fullest. I cant believe it's already been a quarter century since those happy days.




none
 
Comment:
 


Submit Comment