Sunday, January 20, 2013

A software tool for designing games: Ludi

This was a neat find from metafilter.com: an article on BoardGameGeek about a game called 'Yavalath' that was designed by a computer program.

First the hook: the game Yavalath sounds interesting. It's played on a hex map (a hex of hexes); two players take take turns placing pieces in two colors; you win if you get four in a row of your color ... but you LOSE if you place three in a row.

The Ludi program uses a sort of evolutionary programming process ... it scrambles a bunch of game rules to make rule sets, then simulates playing the games and uses some kind of heuristic to decide which games would be interesting to human players.

Further, the humans working on the project then had people play the top-ranked games (Ludi generated 1048 games and ranked 19 as interesting to humans). The people's choice, Yavalath, was actually #4 on Ludi's list. 

Other details show that clearly the algorithm for predicting human interest isn't perfect. One of the highly-rated games had rules too complex for people to like. But so what? Think of this thing as a game design tool, a way to test and iterate options. Because isn't that the problem with game design -- one can imagine many rule choices, but it's expensive to try them all. 

The story I read about the famous German game Setters of Catan is that the author, Klaus Teuber, spent months playing the game with his family every night, testing out various rules. That's fantastic, and supports the widespread popularity of the game, but few people can make that sort of testing happen. I know I've played many a game that didn't seem like it had been playtested nearly enough. 


Tuesday, December 04, 2012

Heroes of Science action figures

When I first saw this, I feared it was real, and I would need to own all of these...

http://datazoid.deviantart.com/art/Heroes-of-Science-Action-Figures-337514889

...however, they're actually all customized versions of other figures. :)

Sunday, November 18, 2012

My Poem Published in Star*Line 35.4


I had a poem published in the October-December 2012 Star*Line! The poem is titled, "Rats Live On No Evil Star." The photos show the issue cover and a blurry spread of my centerfold placement in the issue.
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Tuesday, October 02, 2012

It took Cory Doctorow ten years ...



"It took ten years for me to sell a story to a "major" market, and during that time, I racked up hundreds of rejections. Looking back on it, I can't really understand why I kept on, except that I couldn't stop. I'm glad I kept at it, but man, what a grind that was."
-- Cory Doctorow, in an offhand aside on a post on BoingBoing yesterday: http://boingboing.net/2012/10/01/how-frederik-pohl-became-a-pul.html

Saturday, September 01, 2012

My flash story "Ceviche Azul" published in _Mirror Dance_

I'm very happy to announce that my flash-fiction story "Ceviche Azul" is now up on the Mirror Dance webzine. Read it to learn about a very special recipe.

The main site is here... http://mirrordancefantasy.blogspot.com
and my particular story is here ... http://mirrordancefantasy.blogspot.com/2012/09/ceviche-azul.html

Saturday, August 25, 2012

_Swordspoint_ and "The Death of the Duke", by Ellen Kushner

I put the novel Swordspoint by Ellen Kushner on hold after reading her short story "The Death of the Duke" on Strange Horizons, and reading the introduction to it. It's not a recent book -- it's from 1987. By the time the book arrived, the only thing I remembered about it was that it was a no-magic fantasy.

It's a great book with strong characters and a believable setting. I was skeptical of the no-magic fantasy at first, but I'm very happy to read about a place with cultural differences -- mainly, the use of dueling-by-proxy to settle disputes between noble houses.

It's a short book and a pretty spare setting -- all the action takes place in a nameless city, the capitol of a realm that somehow kicked out its king years ago and has been getting along fine via a council of nobles.

Perhaps the oddest thing about it the society is that some characters are bisexual and no one makes a big deal of it. There's no angst associated with it and it's never used as a plot point.

Some of those bisexuals manage to get it on a number of times, but it's handled adroitly -- the book is pretty romantic while being less racy than a lot of recent romance novels. Probably if the thing was filmed, I'd find it uncomfortable to sit through. But this isn't a film, it's a story with characters who make you feel strongly, and I can't ask for better than that.

Also, cool swordfights.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

I got an Honorable Mention in the Writers of the Future contest!

I've been waiting to announce this ... waiting for the contest people to post this on their own blog. Which they've now done here: http://www.writersofthefuture.com/node/725

This was for a story called "Dragon Hunter."

Saturday, August 18, 2012

_The Poison Eaters_ by Holly Black

I read somewhere that Holly Black was good. The Poison Eaters is a collection of fantasy stories. I liked all of them. This is rare in the extreme.

Her viewpoint characters are kids and teens on the edge of society, mostly, which is unusual, and handled well by her. Read it. You won't regret it.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Delilah Dirk Webcomic

I'm just in chapter one of this webcomic about a woman warrior who confounds the chauvinists of Constantinople, and it's already given me a bunch of chuckles: http://www.delilahdirk.com/