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Underspace News

April 2022 Devlog

Welcome to April starchasers! Hopefully you survived April Fools intact, and if not, there’s always superglue.

Meanwhile, we’ve been chugging away at getting the game done. We’ve chosen our first round of testers and handed out the alpha build of the game to them, and a huge amount of progress was done this month.


Before we get into that, I’m announcing a small delay in the release of our next demo. 1.10 has some bugs to work out, and notably the Linux and Mac builds are both lagging behind due to some texture packing errors. The good news is when it releases, it should have a lot more features (including the new painting system among other things).

Now, onto progress! As always this is just a paraphrasing of the main article, which you can read here! You can also check out our demo and check out our Discord!



Even More Quests

While not the focus this month, plenty more quests were added, and we’re closing in on a respectable 40/60 completed. A lot of the more complicated quests are being completed now, and those occasionally need new tech and extensions of the scripting system.


More of course, will get implemented later on.


Those Usual Bugfixes, Improvements, and Such.

Our first testing build was given out to testers, and with it, a whooole buncha bugs have been found. In between fixing those, I’ve taken the time to do some additional QoL and reworks of things.
The UI has been improved, with the hazard readouts reporting radiation damage per second, storm level, and the number of missiles or mines currently targeting you. Bandit holdups also now display the time until their generous offer expires.


Testers really loved the fact that you could enter formation with a hostile ship and use that to chase them. Except that was a bug, not a feature. So instead, I made it a feature.
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

I refactored how large ship AI worked, allowing it to fire a variety of projectiles and choose targets far more efficiently.

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Painting is also getting a rework. Ships will now have three color channels while decals are far more efficient and work a lot close to how I want them to.
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I’ve also just been passing over and polishing, redoing, and reorganizing systems in places to fit better.

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Finally, things like gunboats, large drones, and more are getting proper explosion fuses worked out.
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[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]


Tons of Assetwork

Last month as you recall, I promised to texture and model out every boss. Unlike SOME people, I keep my promises.


And while I was on that texturing binge, I textured a lot of assets that were missing said textures: missiles, NPC enemies, drones, and more.


Robotic characters, including both characters themselves and portraits for Hal-9000 AIs have gotten modeled out and textured (though they’re yet to be animated).


I’ve also been largely unsatisfied with how the game’s girder scrap models were. They used an alpha shader to simulate detail, but you couldn’t fly through so that means they’re bad. So I redid them to be properly detailed via geometry.



And that’s all for this month. Check back next month, for more updates, more content, and possibly even some… space dungeons? We’ll see.

March 2022 Devlog

Top of the morning to you, starchasers! Welcome to March, the month that hopefully sees the end of a long and mildly annoying winter and the start of the exact same winter. Wisconsin is fun like that.

Our next demo, demo 1.10, is scheduled to be out soon. This will also coincide with our first round of testers being chosen and the first beta testing build being released to those testers.

As always, you can check out and apply for testing in our Discord, and you can check out the current version of the demo here! Now, onto progress!

And of course, this is just a paraphrasing of the main article, which you can read here!

Quests and Quest Technology

Last month I talked about how we were finally ready to implement the some 60 sidequests that make up Underspace’s content. This month, around half of those were added and are currently in a playable state. They lack polish and often voice acting, but they’re there and playable. There’s a great variety of quests too, from starship heists to facing down ancient monsters.

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A lot of background technology for quests got improved, and I think modders will have a fun time with the scripting system we’ve implemented (since it’s pretty easy to work with).

Stations got some improvements as well. NPCs can have conversations with one another, while you can use taxi services during some quests to get where you need to go.
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]


Texture Improvements

Points of interest also got an improvement. All those ancient jumpgates, lost superstructures, and more all have custom textures. Surprisingly, thanks to the magic of actually properly compressing your assets (remember that AAA studios? Remember that???) the total file size of the game has actually gone down.

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
Next up for getting proper textures are bosses, that’ll be fun!


Game Improvements

In an effort to preserve my sanity, I also spent the time doing some non-quest related things. Station descriptions now properly display things with COLORS, like what ships you’re able to afford. Certain station UIs now have animations too.

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Storms have lots of improvements now too. Ones that spawn bosses will automatically shift your target to said boss, and approaching a storm now plays appropriate music, and treats it like the battle it is.
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
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There’s also new hazards. I hope you always make sure to avoid the giant ancient space train!
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]


Assetwork

And last but not least, a few assets. We’ve got a lot of various new characters and monsters. You’ve heard of chest mimics, but how about… space station mimics?


Also, space taxis and new models for things like say, computers and such.



That’s all for this month. Check back next month, we’ll have more quests, textured bosses, a new demo, and more!

February 2022 Devlog

February is here once again, starchaser. Be sure to kiss your wife goodbye and give her a big thing of chocolate hearts. In the meantime, you’ve got storms to face.

But first, a little announcement: We’ve begun to open up private testing applications! The good news is that testers get full access to the full, current build of the game, and anyone can apply.



The bad news? You’ll have to do this through our Discord. We need a way to easily communicate with testers, and that’s currently our best option (since forums went extinct in the great media wars of 2010). But, you’re free to apply and learn more on our Discord. And as always, you can check out the free public demo we have out.

Now, onto progress! There’s lots of that this month. Not even a thirty-six hour stay in the hospital can slow me down; Death himself fears me. As always, this is a paraphrasing of the main article, which you can read here.


Quest and Campaign Work

The biggest announcement this past month is the first draft of ALL sidequests have been finished. That’s some 425 pages over some 60 sidequests, not a small feat by any means. Luckily, writing them takes FAR longer than implementing them, and plenty of them have now been added to the game (and we’ve gone back over existing ones to make them work, have more dialogue, and generally be improved).

Sundered stars, dead kings, ancient pirate ghosts, and much much more feature in various storylines and plots throughout the galaxy. We’ve also been improving some of the background scripting system, to save space and time on our end.
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The campaign itself also got a few improvements. Enemies have been rebalanced for the early game, the tutorial system got an overhaul, and the first bits of voice acting tech (tying sound to animations) has been implemented. Check it out.

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

Expect more quests, in fact, expect mostly quests from now on as we edge closer to release. It’s where the majority of the game’s content comes from, after all!


Chapters and Starchasing

Players can now join various starchasing chapters throughout the galaxy. These subgroups (some created by our Kickstarter backers) have their own subgoals and specialties they specialize in. Players can complete tasks, kill enemies, or run missions for them and in return gain rank and payouts.


[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

You can swap between chapters at any data center, which also lets you now track storms in regions. Conveniently paying a fee to these data centers will allow you to view incoming storms (IE, spawn them in a region of your choice) as well as switch chapters and claim rewards (don’t worry, you can’t lose progress in chapters).


[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

More of these will also be implemented as time goes on, so be sure to always check your local data centers in various star systems.


Gameplay and QoL Work

In between overcoming various writer’s blocks for sidequests, I spent the month implementing and refining a few new QoL stuff, mostly related to UI and management of such.

The player can now for example, have a clear indicator of nearby garages, and can freely swap between ships at any shipyard. I thought about restricting this, but then I realized “wait, why?”


[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

Certain bits of the UI are more informative now too. Scanners show the proper ranges and distances of their upgraded software, and classed weaponry now shows the class of the actual hardpoint it’s mounted on. Scanners also now, of course, can emit damaging pulses: a desperate but often useful AoE attack.

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]


And as mentioned, the tutorial tip system has been upgraded to apply in more situations.




Assetwork

And finally, assetwork. I’ve redone wrecked ship textures to be based off textures directly, instead of shaders. Why? This allows me to layer those textures AND THEN have shaders as well, while more tightly controlling certain aspects of wrecked ships visually.



And we’ve got a few… assets being worked on. Like everyone’s favorite religious mushroom zombies: the Us! It’s okay, they’re nice guys, really.



Or various drafts of ancient, long dead races. But hey, even the dead leave behind corpses, just ask the Us. It’s okay, they’re nice guys, really.



That’s all for this month, check back next month as we ramp up more content production and whatnot. Again, if you’re interested in testing the game, check out our Discord, as well as our demo!

January 2022 Devlog & Demo 1.95

Happy New Year starchasers. I’d give some big speech about peace and love and the brotherhood of mankind, but you’re busy. So let’s move onto the REAL stuff.

First off, demo 1.95 is now out! This is a smaller update that contains a smattering (that’s a real word) of bugfixes, along with some new immersion features and more. Check out the changelog and give it a whirl!



Starting soon, we’ll be opening up the rest of the galaxy to our playtesters, hand-selected via advanced machine learning techniques on our Discord. You can check there for more information in the coming month. Now, let’s get into everything.

As always, this is a paraphrasing of the main article, which you can read here.


Yearly Overview

I’ll start by saying the most important thing: the plan now is for Underspace to be released in 2022. We’re at the stage now where so much of the game and its content is far enough along that I can give at least that vague release date with something resembling a kind of confidence.



The reason for that is that, as this month opens, the game is very much in a playable state. Indeed, it has more content and features than certain… other games it may have been inspired by. There’s a huge amount of things that can be seen, done, fought, and more.



Every star system is in, every station and equipment sold on that station is in. Of the 20 ambient bosses, 15 have their first drafts finished (as in, playable to completion but lacking polish), and of the game’s some 75 vignettes/points of interest, every single one has its first draft finished.



The first draft of the main campaign has been written and scripted, but not fully implemented. In general, quest and storyline work is one of the three big blockers that still remains. Many of these have their first drafts done, and around 20% are implemented to some capacity.



However there are well over 50 quests in the game, some of which can get quite extensive. The irony is that writing these takes far more time than actually putting them in game however. You can see more on what’s been done there in the questwork section.



The next big blocker is station/planet interiors. There’s no functional difference between the two, but we’re talking some 150 small levels that need to be detailed with plants, furniture. Jars of vegemite. Whatever people put in their homes. Jars of vegemite, right? Anyway this is one of the biggest blockers, but luckily we have extra level designers working day and night on it, leaving me free to do other things.




The final big blocker is multiplayer. That includes making sure singleplayer mechanics work, allowing for server hosting, and the massive amounts of bugtesting. This is my white whale right here. There’s not actually a whole lot to be implemented in fact. But implementation and smooth implementation when it comes to multiplayer are two different beasts.



Then there’s a smattering of your usual polishing, texturing, assetwork, etc, etc. Expect always to see this in between updates on new quests and space dungeons.



And that’s what has to be done. So, onto what has been done.


Questwork & Dialogue Improvements

As mentioned, I spent this last month writing the first drafts of as many quests as I possibly can. It’s not an easy task, as altogether you’re talking about six hundred or so pages of dialogue. Happily, that number has been majorly chipped away at, and of Underspace’s 58 or so sidequests, 18 remain.



Quests mean dialogue, so I’ve also spent the end of last month adding new camera controls to on-foot dialogue, allowing names, focused characters, and the camera to change on the fly. Good for sorta-cutscenes and multi-man conversations.

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
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NPCs have lots of new things to say out in the stellar now too. Service ships can now repair and restock your ship, for a fee of course. Meanwhile Us traders (those green zombie ships) now carry and offer, if you can afford it, extremely expensive and rare items for the discerning starchaser.

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[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

And pirates now will shake you down for money, valuables, and your worldly possessions while raiding lanelines.

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All these new features are in the new demo, so check it out!

Other Enhancements

I’ve gone and done a great deal of work on pathfinding. Again. The results are good though, no more NPCs flying through things. Hopefully.

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

Furthermore, you can now properly enter formation with ships and follow them at a good pace, I’ve even added dialogue controls to detect WHAT you’re in formation with.

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Speaking of following, NPC followers are better about avoiding colliding with you. They’re a little more careful now.

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Large ship colliders got a refactor. They’re far more accurate, but in addition can now specify weak points on a ship (where they take extra damage).

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Some asteroid models got a rework to bring them up to the graphical standards of their fellow asteroids. Low poly asteroids on pirate bases and similar were also reworked into new models, because why not?

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]


Your UI also now gives detailed information when it updates about WHAT it updated. A useful tool.

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And finally, we’ve added booster rings. After all, there is racing in this game. What would a space race be without a booster ring?

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Assetwork

Finally, there’s the usual modelings of bosses (not all of them though, we’re keeping a few things secret), alongside tilesets for big space dungeons. Because I know, deep down, you’ve wanted to fly through a space cathedral.


That’s all for this month, ideally next month I’ll have all quests written up, along with more content-related progress to share. Check back then!

December 2021 Devlog

Happy holidays starchasers! It’s the Wintery times, when the red liquid in the thermometer that mommy says you shouldn’t drink drops to a pinprick of nothingness and ninety tons of white pain descends from the sky to ruin your plans to wash your car and freeze your knuckles until they bleed.

In other words, it’s the perfect time to sit inside, mope about, and get a HUGE amount of progress done! Actual work. You know, content and stuff. I could talk about all the things that got done and the current state of all those things here, but I’d rather cover them in each individual section. Let’s get to it!

As always, this is just a paraphrasing of the main article, which you can read here. And of course, as always, be sure to check out our demo and Discord.



System Detailing and Do-overs

Last month I talked briefly about adding detail to star systems. Not points of interest, bosses, or quests, but the little things that add that much needed quality that Skyrim modders sometimes call “immersion”. This month, EVERY single star system has reached its goal for detailing! That’s right, EVERY single one. But what does that mean?



It means hazards around the wreck of every large ship (and mechanics for them). Asteroid miners and big asteroids in asteroid fields. Ships in every shipyard and billboards along most every highway. Subtle rotational effects on planets!


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I’ve also been going back over systems and changing lighting, placements of planets and spawning bubbles to help traffic flow better, or make the lighting from stars less intense.


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These redoes will be a thing constantly being done during development as places seem to flow or don’t look quite right. It’s one of those ongoing processes.


Vignettes and Points of Interest

Another massive milestone this month was that every single point of interest had its first draft finished! Some are missing textures or the mechanics aren’t quite where they need to be, but you can now see and view every single one in game.

For example, this time traveling spaceship. Loot its innards for bigtime loot, but don’t get caught in the various warps!

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Or the famed Curshian Death Cube. What secrets lie beyond its deadly six sides? We can only wonder.

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But we can’t forget about those naturally occurring vignettes too. Hidden coral forests, lost groves of space amber, huge snaking rock spires, and mushroom forests. Who doesn’t like space mushrooms really?
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And much much more!


So, rejoice starchasers. This is a major milestone for the game, and just an example of how much closer we’ve finally gotten to releasing the game.

Campaign and Quest Work

For this month’s campaign work, I blocked out and added a lot of content to the non-unique, non-campaign systems. Those moments, areas, and setpieces that involve them, you know? Be warned, there’s spoilers ahead here!
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Quests got a lot of mechanical work done to them. I adjusted how shields work for certain quests, allowed text to parse itself and display data about stats and global variables, and moved around a few old demo quests to new locations, rewriting them appropriately.

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
Expect to see more work done on quests in the coming months!


Various Other Improvements

Of course, lots of other things are happening as well. You can now customize your character and buy clothes for them, for example. Just be wary, because NPCs and other station interactables can now have restrictions set on them!
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Combat lines have been improved, you won’t see chatter as frequently anymore, and it’s been separated out into defensive and offensive lines respectively.
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And finally, I’ve made sure to fix up and improve the effects of legendary ships found in stormed areas. For example, this overloaded fighter, whose ship becomes a ticking time bomb that will rip open a rift if not destroyed fast enough (and offers excellent loot to those who manage to do so).

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Assetwork

Not too much to say about assets this month. Mostly it was about finishing up the models for various vignettes, or wrecking pre-existing assets for areas where pre-existing assets needed wrecked variants. But we also have a space train! A TRUE space train, in fact.



That’s all for this month folks, Happy Holidays, and check back next month for our yearly overview.