Difference between revisions of "Creating a Creature"

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[http://frozenfeather.deviantart.com/art/eye-chart-251804495 FrozenFeather’s eye chart] could be useful.
[http://frozenfeather.deviantart.com/art/eye-chart-251804495 FrozenFeather’s eye chart] could be useful.
=== Mechanical Conceit ===
It is also possible to start your design from the other direction: choose a mechanical role that you want the creature to play in battle, and then design it from the bottom up.
This is the approach of the [http://www.smogon.com/cap/ Create-a-Pokemon project].
=== Name ===
There are no hard-and-fast rules for names, but consider:
* Tuxemon on the same evolutionary chain often have similar names
* Names are often based on puns or references
* Names are often compounds of two different words
[http://blazeknight-94.deviantart.com/art/Fakemon-Tutorial-283276446 blazeknight-94’s tutorial] describes four naming conventions:
* Pure word associations
* Clever word associations
* Anagrams
* Saying misspellings
=== Type(s) ===
In Tuxemon, there are five types, and a tuxemon can belong to one or two of them:
* '''Fire:''' Includes creatures associated with energy, like electricity and heat, dragons and other legendary beings, and poison.<br />
* '''Water:''' Includes creatures associated with the sea, lakes and swamps, ice and snow, the weather, and fish and amphibians.
* '''Wood:''' Includes creatures associated with plants, lichen and fungi, forests, the natural environment, the wind and flying, and the wilderness.
* '''Earth:''' Includes creatures associated with the ground and underground, dirt and soil, mountains and rocks, caves, and ancient and buried things.
* '''Metal:''' Includes creatures associated with steel, darkness, mechanical and robotic things, psychic powers and other unnatural things, humankind, and the undead.

Revision as of 05:54, 30 April 2016

Duplicate of https://github.com/Tuxemon/Tuxemon/wiki/creating-creatures

Making a Creature

This is a guide to creating your own creatures for the Tuxemon open source monster battling game. We are pretty tolerant of designs that vary from these specifications, and we’re always happy to help out with advice and feedback.

You don’t have to do all of these steps yourself! Just post whichever you feel like doing, and we might be able to find someone to help fill in the rest.

Design

It is difficult to provide concrete advice for the design of a tuxemon. Look at other monster battling games, especially Pokemon, and think about:

  • What the creatures are based on: puns (like Farfetch’d), obscure animals, animals with an elemental twist, etc.
  • How they are represented: How detailed are they? How are complex concepts communicated in simple shapes? How cute are they? Is there a difference between how basic Pokemon, first stage Pokemon and second stage Pokemon are depicted?
  • What is added to the Pokemon to make it distinctive, appealing and iconic
  • What is missing from Pokemon that might be added to other cartoon creatures: What is the Pokemon style?

blazeknight-94’s tutorial describes six origins:

  • Logical associations
  • Shape associations
  • Cliches
  • Behavioural associations
  • Famous character tributes
  • Puns

FrozenFeather’s eye chart could be useful.

Mechanical Conceit

It is also possible to start your design from the other direction: choose a mechanical role that you want the creature to play in battle, and then design it from the bottom up.

This is the approach of the Create-a-Pokemon project.

Name

There are no hard-and-fast rules for names, but consider:

  • Tuxemon on the same evolutionary chain often have similar names
  • Names are often based on puns or references
  • Names are often compounds of two different words

blazeknight-94’s tutorial describes four naming conventions:

  • Pure word associations
  • Clever word associations
  • Anagrams
  • Saying misspellings

Type(s)

In Tuxemon, there are five types, and a tuxemon can belong to one or two of them:

  • Fire: Includes creatures associated with energy, like electricity and heat, dragons and other legendary beings, and poison.
  • Water: Includes creatures associated with the sea, lakes and swamps, ice and snow, the weather, and fish and amphibians.
  • Wood: Includes creatures associated with plants, lichen and fungi, forests, the natural environment, the wind and flying, and the wilderness.
  • Earth: Includes creatures associated with the ground and underground, dirt and soil, mountains and rocks, caves, and ancient and buried things.
  • Metal: Includes creatures associated with steel, darkness, mechanical and robotic things, psychic powers and other unnatural things, humankind, and the undead.