Guide a mother and her child as they embark on a journey through magical architecture, discovering illusionary pathways and delightful puzzles as you learn the secrets of the Sacred Geometry.
@dan_gray Few questions for ya!
1) Where was the idea for Monument Valley born?
2) What is the unifying characteristic of UsTwo titles? Obviously they tend to be visually interesting. Is there more to it?
3) When play testing a game like this, how do you determine when a puzzle is too easy/too challenging?
4) Any future plans for the franchise you can speak to?
@russfrushtick Great questions!
Back in early 2013 and being a newly assembled team we were throwing ideas around on what our next big thing should be. Out of nowhere Ken created a piece of concept art that we stuck up on the wall in the ground floor of the ustwo studio. Anybody who came in whether they were internal or external would ask what it was, it definitely piqued peoples attention. Without this piece of art having any impossibility at this point we dedicated three weeks worth of work on a prototype, at the end of this we just knew it was something we had to make.
Will come back for the other questions :)
@russfrushtick
Question number 2!
After Monument Valley we sat down as a team and attempted to work out exactly what made the game a huge success, after this we also creating a list of values that we believe our titles should be hitting in the future. Off the top of my head here's a few:
Everything ustwo game must have or be:
Artistic integrity
Lasting impact
Platform perfect
Personal pride for the creators
Elevate games as an art form
Risky to make
A game you can fall in love with
Quality on all fronts, at no expense
@dan_gray@russfrushtick I just began playing this game and IMO this is how games should be done. You've certainly achieved all of your core values. In this post-Lean Method world, it's truly inspirational to see people betting on their vision, holding the initial excitement, pushing through the difficulties, and carrying out the vision into perfection.
@jtzou Hey Jonathan!
For most of the public this is definitely "The Box" from the original Monument Valley. There's just something so charming and toy like about it. For me personally though it's definitely "The Oubliette" in Forgotten Shores, or "N-Sided" as we called it internally.
I've said it in other interviews before, but I genuinely think it might be THE most expensive single level in mobile game history, we put that many hours into getting it right. Originally it was intended to be part of the main MV release, but we just couldn't get it right. Poor Manesh spent weeks and weeks getting a puzzle that fit with the core idea of a room with unlimited sides and nothing was sticking. Eventually we put it to bed but vowed to return to it, we weren't going to be defeated.
Eventually with another couple of months worth of development time post release it came together at last into something quite a lot of players believe to be the best level in Forgotten Shores. Sometimes the most arduous tasks are those that are the most fruitful.
@rrhoover This is something I usually leave to Ken to answer, as that first spark of an idea is so close to his heart. But on this occasion i'll take the reigns as we've worked with each other for so many hours by this point that I can invade his mind and steal the answers.
The most obvious inspiration is that of M.C. Escher, that's undeniable and runs through everything we did, but we often site a wide range of things from Japanese woodblock prints to architecture from around the world. From a games point of view an experience such as Windowsill from Vectorpark was a great example of creating an experience as opposed to a game.
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