Category: Exocolonist

  • Awards Season for Exocolonist!

    Awards Season for Exocolonist!

    Big news – I Was a Teenage Exocolonist is a finalist for Excellence in Narrative at the IGF (Independent Games Festival) (plus an honorable mention for Visual Arts!)

    Not only that, our game has also been nominated for Best Narrative in the GDCA (Game Developers Choice Awards – these are the Oscars of video games)

    AND we’re a finalist for the Social Impact Award in the GDCAs.

    These are the big ones; the awards that devs (speaking of myself here) spend their entire career working towards. It is an incredible honor to be nominated.

    The IGF also features an audience award, so jump in and cast your vote here!

    Since our narrative design is getting so much attention, here’s an article I wrote for gamedeveloper.com about The Narrative Octopus of I Was a Teenage Exocolonist. If you’d like to play around with Exo’s custom scripting language yourself, I’ve made a rough version of Exoscript open source on Github.

    Earlier we had the honor to be nominated for Best Storytelling in the 2022 Golden Joystick Awards, Games For Impact at The Game Awards (their most misguided category according to Kotaku), Best Playstation Game of the Year in the PLAY Magazine Awards. Back in 2020 I Was a Teenage Exocolonist won the IndieCade award for Procedural Design. And honestly? I’m cool with our nomination for “most pretentious indie game” in 4chan’s Vidya Gaem awards. That’s how you know you’ve really made it.

    Since I am linking links, Northway Games has been in the IGF before: Incredipede for Visual Art in 2013, and Fantastic Contraption VR for Nuovo in 2016, and Deep Under the Sky had an honorable mention for Audio in 2015. But this is the first time one of my games has made it, and I am on cloud nine!

  • Exocolonist Cosplay

    Anemone cosplay by Ellie Amber, directed/edited by LAYER013Photography

    For I Was a Teenage Exocolonist’s release, we partnered with some phenomenally talented cosplayers, including the amazing Ellie Amber featured here dressed as adult Anemone. I was absolutely bowled over with how much creativity and attention to detail went into these costumes.

    Seriously, so beautiful!! Check out Ellie’s making-of process videos on Instagram:

    Anemone cosplay by ellie.amber
    Pauldrons shaping

    Pauldrons painting

    Wig trimming and styling

    Boot details

    Accessories

    Sewing

    Final product!


    Ellie also created a PDF of cut-and-sew patterns for the costume and accessories, right down to Anemone’s scale-armored skin flakes:

    Anemone cosplay patterns
    Anemone cosplay patterns by Ellie Amber

    And there are so many others! This was organized by our friends at Finji and ICO, so each new cosplay post was a delightful surprise to me and the Exo team. Seeing our characters out in the real world is so magical! Many of these creators also posted creation process videos, so scroll through their feeds for more instructions/techniques/mindblowing gorgeousness.

    Behold, more Exocolonist cosplay:

    Clémentine also made (and sent us!!) this gorgeous bobber fruit used in the above video:

    Bobber Fruit by Clémentine Gelly
    Bobber Fruit by Clémentine Gelly (@arborealkey)
    @hiyartist About the game #iwasateenageexocolonist cosplay #utopiacharacter #cosplaycinematic #cinematics #naturalezaincreible ? sonido original – Eva Lara

    @kirapika.cos I LOVE the game ! Go check out this game here : https://bit.ly/kirapika-Exocolonist ! #ad #Exocolonist #ExoInspired #cosplay ? som original – ~{Fairy Sky}~

  • I Was a Teenage Exocolonist is out!

    I Was a Teenage Exocolonist is officially released today! I started development almost exactly five years ago, and wowowow has the game ever grown up since then!

    I’d like to take a moment to thank everyone who supported Exocolonist and helped create it. Artists Meilee Chao, Eduardo Vargas, Sarah Webb, Leanne Roed, Sarah Roland, Diego De la Rocha, and our hundred card artsits for making the game so breathtakingly beautiful. Narrative designer Lindsay Ishihiro for making us laugh, cry, and fall in love with their moving prose. Gord, Em and others from A Shell in the Pit Audio, and all of our incredible musicians, for adding another dimension of wonder and beauty to the game.

    Thanks to my husband Colin Northway for helping with tricky algorithms and game balancing, and for a tremendous amount of emotional support, idea-bouncing and code checks over the last five years.

    Thanks to our publishers Finji, our QA and porting teams, and a very special thank you virtual hug to our incredible beta testers and all of our fans for your support and encouragement. And to my dad, who has logged hundreds of hours living life after life on the planet Vertumna.

    Thank you, friends.

    Growing up in Exocolonist

    Okay enough mushy stuff, it’s release day!

    The team and I have been eagerly waiting to open the gates and invite everyone to come explore our beautiful planet Vertumna. I hope you find it as charming, thrilling, moving, and fun as we do, and I can’t wait to hear what sort of Teenage Exocolonist you’ll be.

    Vertumna awaits!

    – Sarah

    Some plants wave, others bounce

  • The Music of I Was a Teenage Exocolonist, soundtrack release August 19th!

    The Music of I Was a Teenage Exocolonist, soundtrack release August 19th!

    We’ll be celebrating the release of the official I Was a Teenage Exocolonist soundtrack with a team listening party at 10am PT / 1pm EST / 5pm GMT on August 19th.

    Join us on Youtube to be the first to hear the full album!

    I Was a Teenage Exocolonist (Original Soundtrack) album art
    I Was a Teenage Exocolonist (Original Soundtrack) album art by bkomei

    Music to accompany every possible you

    I Was a Teenage Exocolonist begins when you’re an innocent ten-year-old just taking their first steps on a brand new planet, and ends (if you survive!) when you reach age twenty after many trials and harrowing adventures. The mood of the game changes dramatically as your exocolony is plunged into disaster and loss. Some hardships are preventable, others inevitable no matter how many lives you live.

    So it was a challenge to find a soundtrack which could represent that whole spectrum of emotions, and portray all the different people you might become during those ten years: maybe an alien-obsessed bookworm, a brave but pacifist explorer, a high-strung chef, or a kindhearted collector of oddities and odd friends.

    One of thirty possible endings: becoming a rebel
    One of thirty possible endings: becoming a rebel

    Daniel Rosenfeld (aka C418, or “that Minecraft guy”) suggested the best way to represent all these different possible child, teenage, and adult yous would be a soundtrack made by various artists. So with the help of Gordon McGladdery from A Shell in the Pit (who are also doing our audio), I set about recruiting friends and new artists whose style jammed with what I was imagining.

    The result is 27 tracks totaling 2 hours, featuring these 14 artists:

    Gordon McGladdery (A Shell in the Pit)
    Daniel Rosenfeld (C418)
    Shannon Mason (Pongball)
    Andrew Rohrmann (scntfc)
    Gabriel Koenig (Ghost Time Games)
    sintecta
    Kiyoshi Iio (Koku)
    Al Diaz, Rupert Lally and Espen J Jörgensen
    Boris Potschubay (Jogging House)
    Tim Rich (Crooked Walking)
    Jake Gauntlett
    Frances Aravel
    Colin Northway
    Em Halberstadt

    Finding the Style

    It starts with a playlist.

    Music is a social skill that raises your Creativity stat in the game
    Music is a social skill that raises your Creativity stat in the game

    I put together a playlist of inspirations with some of my favorite game soundtracks (Stardew Valley, Wandersong, Jettomero, and yes Minecraft), some ambient electronic artists with heavy synths (Boards of Canada, Jean-Michel Jarre, Hologramme, Home), and some cool instruments (Plaid, Four Tet, Rone, Nine Inch Nails). Plus more tinkly piano, new age (Enya!), Beyonce? and Bulgarian choir to keep things weird.

    Exocolonist is science fiction after all!

    One spooky and melancholy sound I was particularly into was instruments recorded then played backwards, a prompt I gave artists along with the playlist.

    I split the soundtrack into 3 parts:

    1) First half of the game: innocent, bright and optimistic
    2) Second half of the game: moodier, more tense and eerie
    3) Exploration biomes: ambient and naturey

    Some tracks appear throughout both halves of the game to tie it together. They’re all also divided up by season, matching light piano to the glittering peace of Quiet season, and darker synths to the mysterious tension of Glow season.

    The exploration areas where you go to survey, forage or hunt are some of the most beautiful parts of the game, and I felt needed longer more ambient tracks to illustrate how it feels to be away from the bustle of the colony. A friend was discussing modular synths on his stream one day and played a sample of Jogging House‘s YouTube videos:

    Jogging House had this wide array of beautiful musical toys with soothing flashing lights, and usually incorporated some kind of analog tape deck for a touch of static-warble effect. It sounded exactly like a peaceful evening on a bluff overlooking a Vertumnan mushwood forest. I was lucky to license six tracks from him, including this one – Pines – which appears during Wet season and one other special place.

    These tracks were all pre-released by Jogging House through his electronic label Seil Records. I found another synth artist – Crooked Walking – through the label and we were later delighted to find out not only do we live in the same city, but we bumped into each other at a mutual friends’ event. Small world!

    Local Connections

    I met another artist busking here in Vancouver. Kiyoshi Iio (Koku) is no only a talented synth composer, he incorporates acoustic instruments including guitar, didgeridoo, and handpan.

    Handpan is a relatively new instrument that combines cultural traditions from South Asia and the Caribbean and is associated with travellers and boho culture. Much like the people of Exocolonist, who are sort of a multinational hippie commune with a colony ship.

    I think handpan sounds beautiful and ethereal, especially the way Koku plays it. It is a perfect fit for the mysterious beauty of the planet Vertumna.

    Game composer and A Shell in the Pit founder Gordon McGladdery was a big part of the album production, from wrangling contracts and advising on edits to mastering tracks, and he wrote the game’s title track. I was stoked he played some morin khuur for it. A Shell in the Pit also did our audio, and some of Em Halberstadt‘s ambient building hums were so melodic they’re featured on the album too. A Shell in the Pit also composed the soundtrack for Wandersong, Rogue Legacy, and worked on sound for Untitled Goose Game and Night in the Woods.

    You might recognize other artists from game soundtracks too. C418 of course from Minecraft (he’s also working on an unannounced game with Ivy Road). Pongball from Kunai and Road Warriors, scntfc from JETT and Oxenfree, Ghost Time Games from his own games Jettomero and Tux and Fanny, sintecta from GirlJail and other cool experimental jams, and Rupert Lally and Espen J Jörgensen (now collaborating with Al Diaz) from my game Rebuild 3.

    The Finishing Touches

    Jake Gauntlett’s beautiful ambient piano fit right in perfectly with all three parts of the soundtrack. The final track was a tough one though. I was looking for a vocal track to play over the end game sequence and credits, where you find out what path you and your friends’ lives take as adults.

    Scouring new releases on Bandcamp I found Frances Aravel‘s track The Child You Were on her album Shining Out of the Dark. The melancholy lyrics and grungy guitar rock reminded me of my own teens as a 90’s kid. Take a listen and see if you feel it too:

    Lofi Sol
    Lofi Sol

    So join us on YouTube on August 19th at 10am PT / 1pm EST / 5pm GMT to hear the rest of the soundtrack in its entirety, and chat with the devs and musicians. The I Was a Teenage Exocolonist soundtrack will be available to stream or buy starting August 19th on Spotify, Youtube Music, iTunes, Bandcamp, and other music platforms.

    The game is launching on August 25th to Switch, PS4, PS5, PC, Mac, and Linux. Wishlist it today!

  • Exocolonist is coming to the Nintendo Switch!

    Exocolonist is coming to the Nintendo Switch!

    There is a special feeling to seeing one of my games on a new device for the first time.

    I started porting Exo to the Switch over Christmas and it was magical running around, dragging cards, hearing the sounds and music on a device in my hands. I’ve wanted to show you this for so long! Here is me playing the very first working build:

    First time running Exo on the Switch!

    Since then, with the help of Finji QA and 22nd Century Toys, we got it working on the PS4 and PS5 with smooth controls and a bigger more readable UI for all platforms. It looks gorgeous, friends! You’re going to love it on your platform of choice.

    I Was a Teenage Exocolonist will launch on August 25 2022!

    Platforms are (this is the complete list for launch, finally): Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Mac, and Linux. You will find it on Steam, Itch.io, Humble, and Epic.