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Thursday, February 11, 2010

A D&D Game for Local Profits?

Posted by on Thu, Feb 11, 2010 at 6:07 AM

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A team of students from Carnegie Mellon University's Entertainment Technology Center, based in Pittsburgh, shared a demo of their Dungeons and Dragons game for the Microsoft Surface, which, if deemed scalable and bankable enough, could bring bring profit local companies Microsoft and Wizards of the Coast. The team's taken the venerable static tabletop role playing game and adapted it to a digital tabletop platform. It's a proof-of-concept for now, but the groups involved are very open to the idea of taking the game to market in the near future.

Called SurfaceScapes, the project focuses on using new hardware—like the digital Surface—to re-interpret old games. D&D is just the start, says Michael Lewis, a former Electronic Arts coder who started the project in his spare time. He says, "Once the blueprint is in place it can be extended to any role-playing game platform."

What's more, the project has the blessings of Wizards of the Coast, the local company that owns Dungeons and Dragons, as well as a large host of other role-playing titles. While the company has no formal involvement in creating the game system, some of its employees act as advisers.

Meanwhile, Wizards is keeping a shamanistic eye on the progress SurfaceScapes is making. Lewis says that there have been talks of taking the product to market with both Wizards and Microsoft. Eric Havir, a marketing manager for the Surface device at Microsoft, says, "I could see D&D-enabled Surfaces at places like Gameworks or gaming shops like Uncle's Games. You could have a few friends and rent it for a few hours a week and have a great time."

More on how it works after the jump.

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The Surface is essentially a giant iPhone-like device, referred to as a "surface computer," with other enhancements thrown in, like optical cameras for object recognition. Currently they're being used in hotels and event centers as interactive guides, but there is potential for the device to do quite a bit more. Microsoft is lending devices to groups like the Carnegie Mellon team to come up with ideas on how to get more use out of them.

Digitizing D&D isn't anything new, of course. There have been video game versions for decades, but the team believes the virtual game, that doesn't have an official name yet, allows for a type of interactivity that's been lacking, and I'd have to agree. Playing on the Surface was a lot like playing in the traditional pencil-and-paper style, except the device did all the math for us. Calculating to-hit rolls, damage bonuses, initiative modifiers and more on the fly. It was much more enjoyable than I remember D&D ever being.

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The system includes an interface for the Dungeon Master to control the game from a separate, networked computer. That way the players can't see what's coming before the story's ready. The back-end they showed off was pretty impressive and flexible.

As a nerd who loves applied technologies, the Surface for roleplaying is a no-brainer. As a righteous gamer I want these in production so that Wednesday night game sessions would move along faster and be more fun. Hopefully we'll see these going public in the near future. Who knows, it might even encourage a new generation of gamers to pick up digital 20-sided dice.

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If you're still confused about the Surface and what it can do, we just learned that the new Hard Rock Cafe downtown has one installed that acts as a docent for the memorabilia collection. If you're down there, check it out. They're neat devices that could make the guys in Redmond a lot of money—if they can figure out how to market them.

 

Comments (13) RSS

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Enjua 1
The second picture suggests that the Surface recognizes miniatures by a printed label that you slap on the bottom of the miniature: does this mean that you could play as a salt shaker or coffee mug instead of as a proprietary miniature you had to purchase or rent with the game?

Can you play without miniatures at all: with icons displayed by the surface?

And why does the surface show a square grid instead of what I remember as the standard D&D hexagonal grid (easily substituted by a the inside of a fast food burger wrapper)?
Posted by Enjua on February 11, 2010 at 6:54 AM
The Amazing Jim 2
This may just get me back into gaming.
Posted by The Amazing Jim http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/profile.php?id=100000076496291&ref=profile on February 11, 2010 at 7:25 AM
Arsenic7 3
@1

DnD 4.0 has a square grid. There is the option of incorporating a hexagonal one, but the rules are less restrictive in terms of diagonal movement and such.

Also, I can imagine a system like this that doesn't need any sort of recognition beyond tactile recognition if all you wanted to do was keep track of ones place in the game. I've thought of doing something similar for a game session just using photoshop layers.
Posted by Arsenic7 on February 11, 2010 at 7:58 AM
Akbar Fazil 4
hell, id love to see ANY board game made available on a surface device.
Posted by Akbar Fazil on February 11, 2010 at 8:17 AM
burgin22 5
This has the making of a smash hit among worldwide D&D players and will probably go on to sell dozens and dozens of copies.
Posted by burgin22 http://www.zombo.com/ on February 11, 2010 at 9:14 AM
giffy 6
I love Surface and would have one right now if not the fact that they cost way too much. It would make a killer coffee table.
Posted by giffy on February 11, 2010 at 9:27 AM
7
OSRIC
Posted by AK Rob on February 11, 2010 at 9:58 AM
8
@5 FTW... I don't know what this thing will cost, but it's going to be more than most people can afford.

But it does look insanely awesome.
Posted by dwight moody on February 11, 2010 at 10:02 AM
9
The problem I foresee with this is that the devices for the most part aren't that big. They really seem to be made for three or four people at most to sit around at one time.
Posted by Ben on February 11, 2010 at 10:30 AM
Will in Seattle 10
OK, so it's like an iPad, only it's so big you can't move it ...

Wow.

Technology ... looking for a reason to exist ...

Maybe they could use it to show Maury on?
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on February 11, 2010 at 10:35 AM
The Psion 11
If you're interested in seeing the video they made showing the concept (which I think helps to explain some aspects of it), I embedded the video back in December (it's after the Daily Show clips): http://www.michaelcrane.net/oak/blog/som…
Posted by The Psion http://blog.michaelcrane.net on February 11, 2010 at 10:59 AM
12
@10: Yes, it's so far behind where the Ipad is that it's really almost as though it came out nearly 2 years ago.

It's really just embarrassing how bad Microsoft 2 years ago looks compared to Apple today.
Posted by Ben on February 11, 2010 at 12:58 PM
vinylsaurus 13
Some more fresh details here:
http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/02/10/han…

I hope we get to see this at PAX west this year.
Posted by vinylsaurus http://www.vinylsaurus.com on February 11, 2010 at 1:31 PM

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