I think my jaw actually dropped when you said you're working on a particle accelerator to cure cancer. You're a very very talented person and are amazing at everything you do, keep up the great work!
@_Matt_Matt_365_10 ай бұрын
I rewinded that part 7 times to see the absolutely INSANE infrastructure behind particle accelerator therapy machine he was showing.. INSAANE!!!
@MiniGunTurtle3610 ай бұрын
This sounds like one of those joke comments you see on a video where everyone is wingmanning the uploaded, but in this case the statement is actually real
@avni46210 ай бұрын
I read this comment before I started watching the video and thought it was probably hyperbole to hype the uploader up but you weren’t kidding! Working on a particle accelerator to cure cancer holy cowwww
@Igorooooleynikov10 ай бұрын
Yeah, he is much more useful doing his "boring" job than trying to make it in oversaturated bloated entertainment industry.
@ege82409 ай бұрын
@@Igorooooleynikov dont classify people as useless what the actual fk
@BoogerDad11 ай бұрын
Stylistic suggestion: opening camp town should look more ravaged. like in a way that is obviously damage that can be covered up with progression. Busted wall tiles where the old tiles were, random little fires here and there, blood and stains, dirt piles, etc. then they either get cleaned up as you rebuild or gather whatever remaining resources are left within town (always fun), or they generate back to normal over time once your main home is rebuilt or something. Just to really hammer home that these humans did us dirty. Also, just charge teeth for the tool required to clean up pollution
@box721511 ай бұрын
It’d be cool if you had to put out the fires as a quest
@StarDustForge11 ай бұрын
Great suggestion! Also the pollution cleanup should have some ties to story and overall game progression, maybe the goblins can communicate with nature spirits that need power to oppose the corruption and the teeth are sacrificed at altars or shrines that you have to unlock (with combat?).
@alvin_row9 ай бұрын
I like this suggestion! I always hate to have a dirty place in games, and it always feels great to clean it up.
@nisbahmumtaz90910 ай бұрын
I'm glad that you mentioned the part about the "being able to come back to work anytime" aspect of your journey. Not having such a safety net is 99% the reason why most won't even take the leap that you've taken. Though I've carved the same path as you have, I never had a chance to leave my job, for fear of not finding one if the passion project didn't pan out. What I'd do to be able to taste the love and pain of such a journey...
@unturned606610 ай бұрын
Not to mention that future employers might not look kindly on "took 2 years off to work on a failed art project"
@Venoxium9 ай бұрын
@@unturned6066 honestly depending on what your job is you can just lie about where you were. I've seen everything from "It's under NDA I can't really talk about it" to "I had to take care of my grandma/disabled family for a while". And while it's morally questionable to lie about stuff like that, if it's what gets you the job and makes the employer feel bad for judging you taking time off then it's fine in my book
@GlorbergGoldGate10 ай бұрын
Dude I'm blown away by how much you do. You are an electrical engineer. You do art. You make video games. You make very well edited and planned out KZbin videos. It's seriously so impressive. You have motivated me to start taking my youtube dreams more seriously. And to just do more productive stuff in general. Thank you. Thank you so much.
@ballchen476811 ай бұрын
The work experience you talked about is very relatable for me. I am currently employed as a software engineer by a huge automotive firm. The field does not interest me at all but the tasks can be fun and the pay is good. Every few months I start thinking about quitting and devoting more time to art and/or video games but I am nowhere near self sustaining with that and I fear that what you described might happen to me as well. Thank you for sharing. It makes it easier to be content hearing that other made the same decisions and are doing fine
@DudeWatIsThis10 ай бұрын
I'm making videogames as a freelancer (making my own, working on others on the side). I'm also a software engineer, and I'm in the _complete opposite_ position to you. I'm scared of dropping this, getting a job, and start hating myself for it 6 months into it. It's a big move in my case, because I have a network, clients, licenses, heavy paperwork... all done. Cancelling that would probably mean I'll never get back to it again, it's like 4-5 months of straight paperwork/licensing work that is _DONE_ forever, and I'll lose it if I go to a regular job. But being freelance kinda sucks as well. I spend half my time in meetings or paperwork. And the pay is worse than I would have if I were at some big company. I tell myself "hey, I'm independent" and such and such, but deep down I know it's a cope.
@Fluff_Noodles10 ай бұрын
The first half of this video is so validating to me as someone who loves art but constantly has to explain to my family why i never want to "make a career out of it" I was not expecting the second half if this to be a devlog but it was very interesting and sounds like something I'll pay attention to 💕
@theConcernedWyvern7 ай бұрын
Particle accelorator cancer treatment is such an awesome phrase and it makes me super happy that you are able to work for a project like that instead of working on military equipment. It gave me some hope that my own degree could pan out to do good for the world. I appreciate you sharing
@Vhestale11 ай бұрын
My steam wishlist is now twice as big as it was before I started watching indie devlogs, and I have 0 regrets!
@placeholderdoe11 ай бұрын
I have been thinking about the classic,”I left my job and mortgaged my house to develop my game” story. It’s always rubbed me the wrong way and I love that you’re going back to stability and not demonizing it, there is nothing wrong with a 9 to 5 but so many people say its failure to have one at all and we need more talk around it like this
@Kalitayy10 ай бұрын
9 to 5 is a failure, what are you talking about? Those people who are good enough will find a way to start their own business. That's why independent game devs or artists are almost always better than those who work under companies. This is me saying this as a corporate slave myself btw, I am not good enough to become a successful business owner or whatever.
@placeholderdoe10 ай бұрын
@@Kalitayy i think its important to not view success through the lens of capitalism. Its reliant on skill but also a great deal of luck, if you are born in an unlucky situation you may not get the education to be successful in capitalism. If a person works a barely living wage job for a large company but has a loving family and goes to bed each night feeling happy they are living a successful life. You should not value yourself through the lens of an exploitative system, because you are under the boot of a large company doesn’t mean it’s your fault. Don’t sell yourself short, you are not your value to company. You are a complicated person with a childhood, future, a mind more complicated than anything anyone has ever made, and what looks like to be an anime profile picture. You cannot be a failure by working at a job that you hate
@placeholderdoe10 ай бұрын
You are not most important as an employee, you are a full person and not just employee #427
@InsoIence10 ай бұрын
@@placeholderdoe Couldn't have said it better. I wholeheartedly second this for anyone out there, who thinks 'they are not good enough'. Because you fucking are.
@RictorScale10 ай бұрын
@@Kalitayylol on average you can make wayyyy more money with way less risk being a software engineer than starting your own business. Statistically your business will fail, yet i can have a pretty easy job that makes a fuck ton of money while working on my game project passion. I make enough to buy all the assets i need and i save way more time this way. For anyone reading this, know that it is possible to get a good paying chill tech job that will allow you to work on your passion while making income and remaining financially secure. Im not saying it is gaurunteed, but so far in my career the two places ive worked at have more than allowed me enough time and money to work on my dream. Dont shit on 9-5's in many cases these are the bedrock of income for indie developers until they hit big. Most wont but that is business in general. Look up the Statistics and it will make more sense to you.
@awogbob10 ай бұрын
Stylistic suggestion: when you enter a dungeon the outside world should be dimmed/ black. The dungeon you showed in the forest looked visually cluttered to me at first and little disorienting because I could see everything outside the walls. Generally you want dungeon experiences to feel mysterious / separated / othered and darkened exteriors would help increase that feeling.
@MattyDoesGameDev11 ай бұрын
No complaints here, I love seeing the progression that you're making at YOUR pace! This video is great for the rest of us who are tied to our "normal lives." It's nice to see that you are balancing your "professional" life and your "hobby" life. I am SO excited to see how far you take your projects.
@justalemon96511 ай бұрын
Couple things: 1. The game still looks very fun and I am loving the bosses looks and how they aren’t always the stereotypical dnd characters we’ve seen over and over again but still having a theme (like the bard using a bow and harp as sword and shield making them look more like a paladin, very interesting idea and fun) 2. You said you wanted more animals for the Druid to turn into, so I figured I may be able to generate ideas. Things such as a rhino to do a slash attack if the players get too close, an eagle attack where the Druid charges from one side of the screen to the other (like queen bee from terraria), and maybe an elephant where the Druid sprays out pollution that can linger for a couple seconds and act damage any player walking through it. 3. Gonna ask this on every video, but please add different classes like what terraria has, or at least different weapon types so my friends and I aren’t always after the exact same gear. I feel it could be fun if there were specific creatures that were better at fighting and battling than farming or in dnd there’s psionic goblins who use magic to attack. Up to you, but this is what would seal the game as very replayable in my mind.
@placeholderdoe11 ай бұрын
I think the way you post devlogs(as a “I added this interesting thing” instead of “Devlog #112”) both makes them more engaging to watch and pushes the videos out more. Keep it up! Definitely the game I’m most excited for behind Silksong
@jaceylewis12672 күн бұрын
as someone who’s in the process of making a simple pixel art game, i’m SUPER impressed by this and LOVE LOVE LOVE the way everything looks!! it’s going on the wishlist right tf now!!!!!
@KotieDev11 ай бұрын
Been following for a while. The game looks way more promising than it did back in the turn-based days. I loved that you decided to embrace the change and it really does seem like it has paid off, especially with the addition of multiplayer. Keep it up man
@violettiplady311310 ай бұрын
I’m so glad you followed your gut and went back to focusing on why you love, and your passion.
@KaitheArtGuy10 ай бұрын
I JUST left my job to work on my game full time, this is certainly a cautionary tale! Funny enough I also started as a sprite artist, a lot of my older videos use pixel art, but I leaned into game dev the last 4 years for the money and the fun. Glad you're still planning on finishing the game, I think it'll be so fun!
@Mrflordor11 ай бұрын
I love everything about this game!! the looks, the mecanics, the npc, the bosses. its all very well put together and has a very clear style! well done :)
@Cuteemogirl9410 ай бұрын
Yes, I especially love the concept that the humans are evil since so much anti goblin stuff was published over the last years
@hamzahgamedev11 ай бұрын
Your video production skills are insane.! The game looks so soo fun and all the 22,170 wishlists are very well deserved mate! Also, I am very jealous of your art skills. 🤥
@hadrian92210 ай бұрын
One thing that you should do is make underground walls ( Stone, dirt ext) non-mineable. the player won't feel like they need to walk through caves if they can just smash walls with a pickaxe, searching in caves is wayyyy more engaging then strip mining for loot, and you could put lost ruins in the caves as well, with "Relics" to find
@thewizned11 ай бұрын
Working for the military industrial complex WILL "make a direct impact on peoples lives". Just not in the way you where hoping.
@TheCheff9310 ай бұрын
When I think about games with a good “grind with buddies” setup, I think of Diablo 2 and its “imbue” weapons or armor function, or the sockets in items where you can power them up in endless combinations. Make there a person in town you go to so they can “imbue” one of your items and it gives the item a random power-up. You can do this three times to any item but it gets progressively more expensive to do every time. The item is locked on the third time. The powers stacks each imbue. And people endlessly grind looking for the perfect power combo on every item, thus the endless grinding for “teeth” or money
@ramirosadventures10 ай бұрын
I was recently diagnosed with a brain tumour and had the option of using one of those machines or x-rays for the treatment. X-rays were best for me because they're not as accurate and to talk in game terms do splash damage which is what you want when treating a tumour like mine. Wild when you mentioned working on the proton machine to destroy tumours, it was so close to me hahah This whole experience has taught me that you need to dive into your creative endeavours and callings. Even if it didn't work out for you as you wanted it to, at least you tried and you can live happily with no regrets and hold your head high knowing you gave it a go. Best of luck with developing the game man :) Don't give up! ❤
@Shamoart10 ай бұрын
I can relate a lot to that. Drawing or Art in general for that matter is making me happy, but having to create art that is directed by others or rather is for someone else just takes the joy out of it for me.
@ghostie779010 ай бұрын
Love love love. Making art and having a day job too is the move in this economy. I’m in a similar place to you. A lot of people are!
@alzamonart10 ай бұрын
Hi Matt, I can relate wholeheartedly to this experience. Only that my passion kick is kid's comics, not games, but most everything else... spot on. I didn't quit my last office job, was let go unexpectedly, but then I had huge savings, no debts and said why not go head on into my lifelong passion for once (I did major in Arts but that's another story). Long story short yes I learned a lot of things of the trade, but also the fact that the book publishing market is fickle and small, money-wise, compared to the IT roles I previously held. And that unless you become a bestseller and win a coveted industry award, making books will most likely remain a weekend hobby. And that the life of a freelancer is not all sunshine and rainbows, hard to enjoy your free time when the fear of not making ends meet always lurks around the corner. So I'm slowly coming to terms with selling myself as an UX consultant to cash in on my corporate skills again, while keeping faithful to art on my personal time. At least there's some comfort on not being the only one going through this.
@1234banban10 ай бұрын
I appreciate your commitment. Composing has always been my passion and fear of other life obligations has always made me worried that it’ll only ever be a hobby. But maybe that’s fine too. Keep working on Isle Goblin. I look forward to seeing it released.
@Grinner_J9 ай бұрын
10:14 That next frame popped up and I actually flew backwards out of my chair like when Yoda force pushed Palpatine in Revenge of the Sith and he flew across the room. I don't think anything has ever caught me so off guard before.
@annafawkes10 ай бұрын
i clicked on this video having no idea it was a devlog, but the entire video and story was SO entertaining, and the game looks incredible !! can’t wait for the release !!
@lanidotexe11 ай бұрын
Dropped everything to watch this! It's really encouraging to hear your journey navigating the balance between corporate work and passion projects - I think the way you're really transparently and honestly sharing your experience will help a lot of people in similar positions :)
@Black_Forestt11 ай бұрын
I really enjoy watching your videos. Its not so much looking forward to playing your game, I enjoy your process to problem solving, art style, and how you visually show your journey. Cant wait to see more!
@DeathScavenger42010 ай бұрын
(1:15) "Military defense contractor as an electrical engineer" isn't a job, that's a full blown career.
@SpriteDoge11 ай бұрын
I really hope this game does well because it seems really cool, and with how hard you've been working on it you definitely deserve it!
@lowerthird10 ай бұрын
I'm in a similar place. I'm working in my next steam release trying to find hours and motivation after work (with marginal success). I just happen to work in a AAA game studio so I enjoy my work and the XP carries over to my personal stuff. The video was really relatable and you seem like a down to earth guy.
@letoriousCollin11 ай бұрын
some idea I had when seeing the temple is when you are inside of the temple make the outside all black or something so it feels like you are really in the building. keep up the great work though I love your content!
@michaeljenkins729111 ай бұрын
You could maybe do an npc satisfaction system where when you have a better town area built (using more expensive materials that either take research or other forms of money) then the npcs are happier and will have cheaper prices/ better rng for any rng rolls they do/ gain hearts more easily kinda thing
@ninja.android10 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience in leaving and crawling back to your 9-5. I am 100% sure your game will sell and be noticed, it looks absolutely fantastic. Good luck and never stop creating, you did my day today!
@CptSheeva11 ай бұрын
Genuinely, thank you for sharing your story and the update to your game. I look forward to seeing more. Please keep up the good work
@OXMStudios10 ай бұрын
This is my first time seeing your content, I like this videos and your Way of thinking.
@edwinmaster732611 ай бұрын
3:49 glad you included the puns
@RictorScale10 ай бұрын
I really respect you for making this video. Thanks so much for sharing your insight and journey
@thvist11 ай бұрын
It was really inspiring to listen to how your past year was for you! Congrats for being so brave!
@atom104n11 ай бұрын
Bard boss fight idea if it’s still open to ideas, what if one of the attack patterns plays music in an AOE which slows players down and slowly pulls them to the bard. Afterwards the bard hits them with a bullet-hell attack. This way, it could put more emphasis on the importance and drawbacks of using speed. If the player had fast movement speed, they could escape the call of music. If they had a tankier but slower build, they are more likely to be drawn to the music and may get hit from bullets. Anyway amazing progress and hope to play it!
@deepcosmicspacewizard11 ай бұрын
Dude this is freakin awesome!! I love the art and the game that you're making. I also can relate on the whole work scenario and wanting to find something more fulfilling. Hearing your experience with leaving your job and going back but still finding what works for you, is nice to hear. Because it shows that even when you're not making a living from your "dream job" that you can still find ways to make life good for you, all while doing the things you love and letting life evolve naturally into something more in alignment with you. Thank you and I'll be subscribing to see the progress on your game!!!
@ericfortney216710 ай бұрын
I arrived due to the algorithm for the initial thoughtful discussion and left pumped for a game from a guy I've never heard of before. I appreciate the realness of balancing your dream with the realities of being an adult, looking forward to the game!
@ChickenRanler11 ай бұрын
if monkeys are just real life goblins and parrots are just monkeys of the sky does that mean that parrots are winged goblins?
@PeterMilko11 ай бұрын
You are gonna make it man. Wish me luck too! Im making a goblin game too. *come look
@MasterofAardvarks10 ай бұрын
I'm in a similar boat where I just went full time, not because I can afford it but because of necessity. Good on you to getting to the point where people come to you too much!
@alangregoryvitek11 ай бұрын
I’m in the same boat as you! Work a regular 9-5 and do gamedev on the side. I appreciate your transparency with trying out the full time pixel art gig and the results. Keep on trucking! New job sounds much more fulfilling
@sirguy667810 ай бұрын
Great video! You didn’t give up- you just changed- keep doing what you love while you are doing what you have to do - the game looks great! Keep plugging it- maybe a game producer will see it and change everything!
@CJShopland_Art10 ай бұрын
3:54 it’s choosing the right sort of art, I’ve asked myself the question if pet portraits kicked off if I would be happy doing those commissions. If I set up certain boundaries so I’m not doing 50 hour paintings for 5 hour pay then yes. Would just have to be better at helping expectations and level of art or be paid more if the work is to take a month to complete. From watching this far it’s apparent pixel art was popular but got known as something you don’t enjoy making.
@Nox-q8k10 ай бұрын
We need more videos like this. Survivorship biased causes us to only see success stories where people never have to go back to a 9-5.
@AnimeAthletics10 ай бұрын
Man you did the one thing everyone dreams of but is too scared to do, alot of us are on the same journey! your work is amazing ill follow along for the journey!
@caseywolf55632 ай бұрын
Just added your game to my wishlist. It looks phenomenal so far!
@nickpetrossi200810 ай бұрын
I was checking my wishlist and seen that this game has yet to have a due date and it has been on my list forever it feels like. Which lead me to here. I didnt know you had a youtube! Subbed for sure. Am super stoked for this game. Love the art, love the direction. Love it all! Keep u0 the great work!
@dis_dood11 ай бұрын
I've been following you since your 500 prompts series on instagram and I'm proud how far you've come mate
@getintheoven10 ай бұрын
I LITERALLY cannot wait for your game to drop! I've never related on a more personal level with a youtube video, and I'm hoping for the best with not only your gamedev career, but any other hobbies you choose to take on in life. Very glad to have stumbled across this channel, and will definitely be playing this game the minute it releases!
@diamonde4gle6944 ай бұрын
This game is such a cool idea, and is giving lots of inspiration, keep going! I can’t wait to buy
@DaFluffyPotato10 ай бұрын
I'm in a similar situation. Working as an engineer at a space company while doing gamedev/yt on the side. While I could live off of freelancing and my projects, I wouldn't be able to save much, so I'm waiting until I have enough to "retire" (a lower amount since I can make money from my projects) or until I make a engineering level income from gamedev. Good luck to you!
@jbxrm11 ай бұрын
Such a good video man! I really loved seeing the new changes you've been making, with your thoughtful explanations and reflections of the reasoning behind them. And enjoyed hearing more about how you've dealt with your personal ambitions and career situation. Happy for you that you feel more fulfilled at the new workplace and it fits your personal morals more. Sounds like a great place to land for you while you continue to work on the game as a passion project balancing your financial needs. If you're gonna work a 37 hr week on average for pixel art anyway, and you're feeling the passion slipping, then it sounds like you made a good decision to go back to engineer work whilst jumping companies to something more suitable for you. I like to think that positivity is being reflected with all the great game updates you shared. Keep up the good work. For the "should health = pollution or currency?" dilemma; Maybe cleaning up pollution could still upgrade health / same outcome, but in order to receive the upgrade you need to spend money on items that will be required to convert the pollution. So a health upgrade is both a result of pollution collection and also currency expenditure objectives.
@QueenofErasers10 ай бұрын
I just found your channel and added the game to my wishlist! I hope this sparks joy for you during your important business meeting!
@oodhin-c3t3 ай бұрын
Bro is a talented artist, electric engineer and proficient coder. I'm floored.
@DesignByMatt10 ай бұрын
I think you really learned a valuable lesson and I appreciate that you shared this!
@coltonragan438011 ай бұрын
Colton Ragan here, you said my last name correctly and for some odd reason that's a first in this life! I appreciate you and am so excited to see how this game turns out. I can relate with your existential crisis about your day job, and I appreciate you giving these feelings words!
@allmusicplays10 ай бұрын
I have been following you for quite a long while and im glad you're working on what you want to and sorting out lifes struggles.
@MissSanctus10 ай бұрын
Something funny as a suggestion: you could make health tiers optional and base the specific goblin out of skill, tell the player "hey, you could increase your health by doing this... But if you wanna increase your difficulty while being a widdle gobbolyn, you can avoid it entirely for that extra difficulty spike." Then have a mode for starvation/sleeping for the hardcore crowd. Maybe small town raids like... Some rabid mice to start with, and then as you grow tiers, craft walls and defenses, harder enemies will come to test them. Perhaps adventurers will come after you defeat the base game adventurers! I love the little goblin game you have here the algo has favored you this day.
@Bananenbauer12311 ай бұрын
I studied game design, for a pretty long time too. Could never decide for the life of me what I wanted to commit to. Game design? Art? Programming? All of these categories are equally fascinating to me, but I found game design - the psychological aspect of games - to be the most intruiging. Unfortunately being a game designer isn't really a viable start when applying for positions at a game studio. Most studios just want capable artists and programmers and even then you're gonna need an impressive portfolio to even have a chance. So I went with art and at this point I was getting too overwhelmed with trying to write a bachelor thesis, producing art for a portfolio - throw in some general mental struggles I had at the time and the rather bleak game industry situation in Germany (likely having to move far away from familiy just for internships..) I just couldn't get it done. The vast majority of companies I contacted didn't even reply. Fast forward some time I'm now almost 2 years into an apprenticeship for becoming a web developer and I quite like it. I like that I get to learn more about coding every day and that makes diving into my little game projects way more managable. It's still pretty rough and I only actively do something every other weekend, but I guess learning more about game dev simply feels very fulfilling. And who knows maybe I'll stick with one idea and try to actually finish it, even if it is something small. Your game is looking really promising and it's astounding to see where you've initially come from. Will definitely have a close eye on this game!
@marylizabetha10 ай бұрын
I think regardless of the outcome this was good for you! You probably built a bigger audience through your commissions and gained some perspective!!! :D
@MattCelf10 ай бұрын
Yes, after collage I worked in animation then onto games for 20 + years, AAA and indie stuff in that time. I loved games from an early age back in the spectrum to Atari ST and then consoles. A couple of years ago I quit to get a regular job in warehouse/factory. I'm much happier now than I've been in years. As I said, I used to love games, but now I can't stamd to even look at them and probably never play them again. Doing it for a living sucked all the fun from them. Now I love just doing my own artwork for myself in my own time for no one but me. Game making is long hours and wears you down, sometimes making them in your own time after a day job is way more rewarding and will keep it fun and not become omething you hate : ) Good luck, I think you made a great choice.
@ericralphtaylor7 ай бұрын
Oh man just watched like 3 of your videos. Genuinely loving the content and can't wait to play it!
@MaximumSpice11 ай бұрын
I remember reading a quote, sometimes the best job is just the boring easy job. It might not be fulfilling but allows you the time for hobbies.
@notjinxedyet247911 ай бұрын
I am one of those wishlisted sir, can’t wait!
@danielkelsosmith10 ай бұрын
Goodluck with work man. Just started uni in computer science. My goal is similar to yours. I’m a few years behind, but maybe by the time I’m finished, your game will be out. Then I can watch a devlog history and begin my own journey where you started yours.
@thedeadcomedian894811 ай бұрын
IM IN THE DISCORD SCENE LESGOOOO
@buckyisdizzy11 ай бұрын
haha nice
@edwinmaster732611 ай бұрын
lmao me too
@GoofyBeets11 ай бұрын
You sent a pick of your back dud
@Nestorhnz10 ай бұрын
I don't follow your videos, but the game looks genuinely good so I wishlisted like 6 month ago and I check from time to time your last video to know how much longer it will take to realease an early access, keep the great work, my best wishes for you!
@Derhk__11 ай бұрын
My favourite mechanic to increase max health is making new foods for the player to discover, an example would be a cook book you fill out by finding new recipes and eating them rewards the player with max health and to tie it into the gameplay loop you just put the ingredients in dangerous areas.
@TristanCruz-yb3cf5 ай бұрын
9:59 money suggestion, make it like animal crossing and how you’re always paying off your house loan but instead of a house loan to make your house bigger it’s to increase your maximum HP
@Galoline11 ай бұрын
You did the artwork for I Fight Dragons!!!?!!??? THATS SO COOL!!! 0:59
@ris844710 ай бұрын
Oh! This hits a tad too close to home. The only difference is I wanna work on my own webcomics, and yes, commissions take a loooot of my art time, marketing your art on social media SUCKS SO BAD, I really really hate that part. And I don't even make $500 sometimes :( I'm thinking that a patreon maybe would help ease the load a bit, so less comms = more personal projects! If it doesn't work out, there's always a day job too ^^
@HE36011 ай бұрын
1. What game engine are you using to make your game? 2. Since I like working on games, I make my income through gig apps like Doordash and Instacart. In that way, I could work on my game at anytime. In this way, I don't have to stay pinned down to a 9 to 5 job. Gig apps are probably not for everybody and it does require using one's OWN personal vehicle to do, but I made it work to where if I want to sit and make games, or PLAY video games, go watch a movie, go out to my favorite restaurant or whatever, I could do it whenever I want. So, this is just an idea or at least something that has worked for me.
@kiliantennac164011 ай бұрын
1. He uses Unity.
@TimSwast11 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your journey with us! Hoping that you find a good balance between your day job and your dreams in future.
@ChaloopaJoe11 ай бұрын
Can't wait to see all the amazing things you accomplish!! ❤
@amine_benzaid693110 ай бұрын
I will not stop until it genuinely hard to put down... such good words.
@Skeffles11 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience of going back to work. It must have been hard but it's awesome how you can shift your focus. I hope it makes your game progress easier.
@Joe-lj5ds11 ай бұрын
Art suggestion: Because everything in the game has outlines it is very overwhelming to look at and hard to read very busy scenes. You could maybe consider removing outlines on things like foliage and candles etc. And just have outlines on directly interactable/collidable objects such as characters and walls
@nicksjourney987110 ай бұрын
Congratulations on having the guts to go for it, very cool to hear the hours reauired to make a living at your passion , thanks for making this , good luck with your game !
@MortyMcSpliz11 ай бұрын
Bro this game is gonna be amazing I think the only reason there are only 20,000 wishlist is because not everyone has seen this. Once it starts to get shown to other people it will pick up. Great job!
@hyphe133711 ай бұрын
Knowing that the demo could come out in the next month or two is really exciting! Can't wait to try out the game with some friends once it does come out
@Johnjds10 ай бұрын
Moral of the story is: “all work is work”. Doesn’t matter if you’re indie or working for someone else, it’s still just work.
@rsparks110410 ай бұрын
Damn, this is timely. I'm an alright artist, and for years it's something I've wanted to try doing full-time, but I never felt my stuff was good enough to warrant it. A week ago, though, I started on my first commission, and I'm just coming to terms with the idea that if I keep on this path, I might never have to work at my current job again. It doesn't feel real to me yet, but if it happens, I wonder what I'm going to end up doing.
@HermitMindEndres10 ай бұрын
The game is looking great, I'm glad I found this channel. Idk if this helped but maybe for the money motivation, when buying cosmetic structures maybe they can have passive abilities like increasing resources gathering,or speeding buildings, etc. Or more character based perks like hp regen or faster stamina fill up. Idk though it could be cold, good luck with the development!
@Himedeus11 ай бұрын
I just want to say that I love hearing you talk about not just the game, but your experiences along the way. I guess I can sort of put myself in your shoes and imagine if I had done the same thing. I'm really hoping the game gets even bigger!
@Himedeus11 ай бұрын
And hearing you mention other games (terraria, stardew) influencing how you create yours is very entertaining and interesting! I wonder what other games inspired you as well in other aspects like the art, combat, and other systems haha.
@baltcito2634 ай бұрын
I think about quitting everyday. I'm a hybrid mechanical engineer and computer scientist. Its not even a bad job its just that game design and other creative passions is all I think about and I have this powerful itch to pursue them. This was a great video. Glad to know I'm not the only engineer pursuing our real dreams.
@Kalergi_Plan_Accelerationist10 ай бұрын
Once a wise man said: Art is definitely more enjoyable when your stomach is full, and heater is on. And no one is making you do "the art" to survive. 9-5 and drawing in your free time is the way to go.
@MostafaNassar11 ай бұрын
Hey I get you, I am also an Electrical Engineer and been through your pain points. Leaving my cushy job for a better job, then getting laid off and taking a huge leap of faith to make my inner child proud... Finding a way to make this life sustainable without draining my batteries is and still very scary.. been doing it for 4 years and every year that goes by, am always thinking if next year gonna be "sustainable"... Thanks for sharing your story. The game looks on the right track and can't wait to try it when its out !
@nottodaynolan10 ай бұрын
Man You're Kinda killing it, i say just keep it up and ur videos are great! God Bless and good luck man!
@CarrollLiddell10 ай бұрын
I feel this. I'm trying to go part time so i can work on my creative job in the other part time and take care of my kids and wife.
@k4kadu10 ай бұрын
The game looks really fun. Also, a cancer curing particle accelerator has to be the coolest thing ever! :o
@UFO_MAN11 ай бұрын
I can’t wait to see more of your work, I wish you luck.
@broi-x9i11 ай бұрын
I am really waiting for the game to come out, you are doing a great job and it looks very fun