

This will both add seriousness to the “Dude, Stop”, and allow us to play with the mood of each pack, puzzles or menu screens. Here’s a gif showing how the “Dude, Stop” games flow will look like in the end:Īs you can see, we kept the “trophy shelf” feeling from the Demo version, but added more movement, colors and decorative art. Now reporting a bug is just a mouse click away, and everyone sees them instantly, and in Unity! You can even play and create tickets on the go! This really speeds the whole process up. Luckily, the tracker had an API, so we made an editor that would communicate with it. We already used a bug tracker software, but it was in a browser, not in Unity, and that means that new ticket creation requires too many unnecessary clicks. When we found out, how many bugs we actually have, we realized that we need a special tool that would list all the stuff we need to fix. A game where a guy either gets mad at you or is happy with you. Here’s one example (you could recognize it from the “Dude, Stop” demo):

That could mean completely redoing them or just changing the art and labeling as “new!”. At that point, we at least should be able to play the game! That’s the exciting part! Polishing old puzzlesĪpart from making new puzzles, we wanted to remaster the old ones as well, adding more fun and choices to them. We have to write a script for the story, add the voiceover and sounds to each puzzle, then scatter some trophies here and there. That’s why we’re going back to the drawing board – to fix them all! And to do a couple more things as well.īug fixing isn’t the only task we need to accomplish in “Dude, Stop”. But wait – there’s more! The art is outdated, there’s no fun in them, they don’t feel good – the list goes on. but now that we look at them, many have bugs, a few work badly and some don’t work at all. “They just sat there in the corner without any friends.We did it! We hit another milestone! We finished all the puzzles!. “ kids who wouldn't share their felt pens,” Semple tells Power. While Kapoor has said that Vantablack isn’t actually that useful for painting, since it’s so hard to make enough of the pigment, for Semple it’s the principle that counts. Of course, Semple isn’t cruel enough to ban Kapoor from using this color for life-only until Kapoor agrees to give up his exclusive rights to Vantablack, Power reports. To the best of your knowledge, information and belief this paint will not make it’s way into that hands of Anish Kapoor. However, before purchasing the powdered pigment, buyers have to agree to a legal disclaimer that states they have no intention of letting it fall into Kapoor’s hands.īy adding this product to your cart you confirm that you are not Anish Kapoor, you are in no way affiliated to Anish Kapoor, you are not purchasing this item on behalf of Anish Kapoor or an associate of Anish Kapoor. Semple is currently selling “Pink” through his website for £3.99 per pot (about $5). Now, in an effort to thumb his nose at Kapoor, Semple is making it for sale to everyone in the world-except Kapoor, Tom Power reports for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s Q. While “Pink” isn’t based on nanotechnology, like Vantablack, Semple says it is the pinkest pink pigment ever created. So as a response to Kapoor’s exclusive deal with Vantablack, Semple decided to release his own special pigment, known simply as “Pink,” the Irish Examiner reports. Like Kapoor, Semple’s work often uses vivid shades of color, and for years he had worked with scientists to develop increasingly intense pigments to use in his artwork. It just seemed really mean-spirited and against the spirit of generosity that most artists who make and share their work are driven by.”

"I was desperate to have a play with it in my own work and I knew lots of other artists who wanted to use it too. "When I first heard that Anish had the exclusive rights to the blackest black I was really disappointed," artist Stuart Semple tells Kevin Holmes for The Creators Project. Needless to say, that made plenty of other artists furious. However, Kapoor made an agreement with the company that he is the only person allowed to use it for artistic purposes. Known as Vantablack, the unique carbon nanotube-based pigment is produced solely by a British company called NanoSystem, and was originally developed for military technologies. Anish Kapoor has long been known for his large-scale, intensely colored artworks, but his penchant for being proprietary has long irked others in the art world.Įarlier this year, Kapoor sparked outrage from artists all over the world with the announcement that he had made a deal to become the only person in the world allowed to use the blackest pigment of black paint ever developed.
