Showing posts with label unity game engine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unity game engine. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

The Samer Khatib Legacy Collection™ - Out Now!


✨πŸŽ‰Celebrating 10 years of Snowconesolid Productions game studio!πŸŽ‰✨


πŸŽ‡✨πŸŽ‰ The Samer Khatib Legacy collection celebrates 10 years of Snowconesolid Productions Game Studio and features some of my oldest, earliest and rarest games ever made dating all the way back to 2012. The games featured in this collection were once thought to be forever lost and some have never been seen or played before. Before titles such as Samer Hills, Potato Thriller, and, Giraffe Town - A trail of janky, low quality, and amateur level games were left behind. Dive into the history of Snowconesolid Productions and see how it all started with this retro collection of games by Samer Khatib!

For people who have been following my dev blog since the start, you might be familiar with titles such as Almond Hill, Forest Soup or HideNSeek Winter. These are some of my first 3D games ever developed with the Unity game engine. Before websites like itch.io - I would upload my games to places like Kongregate or directly to my dropbox. Most of my games were only available in Unity's Webplayer format. A build format that created a web playable version of the game. I would do this as opposed to building windows executable versions of the games. Additionally, years ago, I often used dropbox as my main source for hosting my older games. Support for the Unity webplayer was discontinued a long time ago and dropbox was completely changed. I haven't used dropbox in ages. Basically, all my older games have been erased and wiped off the internet because of things like broken webplayers and broken download links. I have made over a dozen different games since starting but only managed to salvage a few older titles.

With The Samer Khatib Legacy Collection, I have restored some of my oldest, earliest and jankiest games ever created and packaged them up into one collection featuring Windows builds for each game.

This rare collection features 5 of the Snowconesolid Productions classics!

Collection Includes:  


πŸ”΄ (2012) Almond Hill - Your cat Almond has gone missing in a creepy town!

πŸ”΄ (2012) Kokoh Gear Meal - Winter is coming. A bear must find food & prepare for hibernation!

πŸ”΄ (2012) Moonlight Mountains - Build a rocket ship and head to the moon to rescue the princess!

πŸ”΄ (2013) Forest Soup - Hunt for ingredients in an eerie place to make soup for a monster!

πŸ”΄ (2014) HideNSeek Winter - Adventure through the infinite snow world to rescue your sister from a demon!

Thursday, September 24, 2020

The Debug™ - Surprise New Game Release! Available Now!


Help an adorable dancing turtle fight off disease infected insects in this groovy arcade-styled adventure!

Nasty Woodensects are attacking the pond! Grab your can of Wood-Be-Gone™ spray and help this adorable dancing turtle take back his home! Protect him at all costs!

Available NOW for FREE: https://snowconesolid.itch.io/thedebug

More on Samer Khatib itch.io profile: https://snowconesolid.itch.io/



Game Features:

+ Full Controller Support
+ Full-Screen Mode (Press ALT+ENTER To toggle On/Off)
+ HD Resolution

Game Screenshots:





- The Debug™ - 
© 2020 Samer Khatib (Snowconesolid Productions) LLC
Game By Samer Khatib (Snowconesolid)





Sunday, January 6, 2019

Official Snowconesolid Productions Website is Live!


Today I am very proud to finally launch the official Snowconesolid Productions website!

https://snowconesolidproductions.com/


Go check it out at the link above. I designed it myself!!!

Also, I now have a new contact email. If you would like to get in touch or need to reach me,
please email me at:

contact@snowconesolidproductions.com


Enjoy!




Saturday, March 3, 2018

My Ice Cream Truck!


     I spent two days working on this and... This is one of my favorite 3d models I have ever created. Now I know it looks a bit rough, a bit unprofessional and somewhat sloppy but that's why I love it so much. I had more fun creating this model more than any other 3d model I have ever made before because I allowed myself to just be creative with it. This was one of those "first instinct" type of works where I just went with whatever I came up with. No planning, no prototyping, no "oh these colors don't work with each other" or "this texture doesn't go here" or "maybe I remodel this more accurately to look more like a real ice cream truck" kind of deal.

None of that. The process was just "I like how this looks so i'm just going to stick with it and keep going" kind of deal. I just let myself have full creative freedom with this one and this is why I enjoyed working on this model and love how it turned out so much. It's kind of hard to explain, but what I mean is, as an artist (and i'm sure many others can relate to this) I always feel the need to get things looking just right. Looking "believable" to a certain extent. So, even though we always create art, it's like we always kind of put limits on ourselves our work flows. It's like we tell ourselves "no, this wouldn't go with the work, it wouldn't make sense, it wouldn't feel consistent". Sometimes as artist, we just have our own set of rules that we force ourselves to follow and in turn that kind of limits the creative process and creative freedom. I'm not sure if any of that made any sense. But, when it comes to creating art - something that should be fun and enjoyable, it sometimes just feels like an un-enjoyable more stressful experience because of how over critical we are of ourselves sometimes, or how sometimes we have high expectations for how a piece of art will turn out and in our head we imagine this perfect, epic, stunning amazing piece of work but then when we go to make it, the actual art work turns out looking nothing like how we originally wanted it to come out. Then we get even more stressed out because the work doesn't look exactly how we wanted and then what happens? That piece of art work just gets scrapped and never seen again. It never gets shared.

Artist need to stop being over critical of themselves. If you make something don't be afraid to put it out. Give yourself creative freedom, don't always try to be a perfectionist because that just makes the process feel stressful. Me personally, I feel like I learned an important lesson from creating this weird ice cream truck model. And that's to just go with first instincts sometimes. If you're having fun creating something, just keep going at it. Don't worry about technical aspects like matching colors based on color theory or getting something looking exactly like something else. Don't think about these things and just keep creating. Experiment with things outside your comfort zone.

     Anyway, I didn't mean to get off topic. This blog post is about my new ice cream truck that I made which I plan on using in one of my new upcoming games.



     The colorful rainbow texture is something I created by accident. I was just messing around in blender and trying some different things and man, you can create some crazy looking materials in there! I kept messing around until I eventually ended up with this colorful graffiti looking texture which I instantly loved and said "yes. This is what i'm going to go with". This texture is created procedurally. It's not just a random image texture that I got and slapped onto the model. It's something I was able to generate in blender through many experiments and it's actually not that hard to create a material like this within blender. Maybe later i'll do a short tutorial to show you guys how I ended up making this rainbow diarrhea.  Most of the materials you see on this model are procedural actually. The eyes and mouth, the ice cream and cone, the sound horns, and even the striped umbrella thing in the back. I was able to generate all of these all in blender alone without outside resources and that is very awesome.




     Here is a white version of the rainbow material. I was able to easily create this using the same rainbow material above. All I had to do was tweak a few settings. I think this white rainbow material seems more fitting for an ice cream truck. It feels like it fits more. but I personally like the original rainbow material I created first in the images above more. I will probably end up using the all rainbow material in the actual game I intend to use this model for.

    The above images are just quick blender renders which show other details such as this specular glossy look and bumpiness and smaller finer details because of the normals. I don't really care much for normal maps or over glossy models so these details likely won't appear on the in game model. I baked out the textures to a map to use in game and the game model of the ice cream truck will look more like this: 





     This again still isn't the final in game look. Once I set this model up in the unity engine, things like the lighting, color correction and other post fx that my game is using will give the truck a more polished look and to match the overall presentation and style of the game itself.

I also created a "rusty" version of this model, a third version which will also be used in my game somewhere.



     That's all for now. More updates soon. Maybe my next post will be about the actual game I am working on. We'll see how things go so keep checking back! I really like my rainbow ice cream truck though!



Thursday, August 3, 2017

Some teasers

     Hello everyone. Going to keep this post quick and short. Here's some cool teaser screens and gifs of what I have been working on. Spoiler, it appears to be a Potato Thriller 2 or something like that.. More info + updates soon. Okay bye!