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This is realtime? There are jaggies?

IGN Interview, screens and video:

Here

IGN: First off, who's developing this project, how big is the team, and how long has it been underway?����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½

Jacques: The Rabbids Go Home core team is made up of people who worked together in Ubisoft's Montpellier Studio on Beyond Good & Evil, King Kong, the official game of Peter Jackson's movie, as well as the first Rayman Raving Rabbids party game.����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½

Today, over 90 people are hard at work on Rabbids Go Home as we move into our third year of development����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¢����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¦ which is pretty rare for a Wii game. We wanted to give ourselves the time and the means on par with our ambitions for a big adventure.

IGN: In some screens and footage, we've seen the Rabbids rolling their grocery cart through skyscrapers, on planes, etc. Is this an open world, or is it level-based? How does everything unfold?����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½

Jacques: Rabbids Go Home has an open-world structure. The action in RGH takes place in a world that concentrates everything one might find in a typical US city and surroundings. Some other environments include a beach, a desert, the everglades����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¢����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¦. The game world is organized, like a spider's web, around neighborhoods (the Hubs), each giving access to several levels. Players can move around freely and choose the level they want to play from these Hubs, but they can also collect resources, strip humans naked and even combat enemies in the Hubs. These neighborhoods evolve throughout the adventure.����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½

There are of course plenty of obstacles along the way that will make collecting stuff a lot less easy than it sounds. Humans will start defending their freedom, siccing mean pooches on the Rabbids, designing surveillance robots and generally equipping themselves with anti-Rabbid kits and traps����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¢����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¦until they become Verminators! Anti-Rabbid propaganda explodes and with it the Verminator craze arises. The Humans will do anything to get back to the quiet, boring and stuff-laden existence they led before those heinous Rabbids showed up!

IGN: The game looks beautiful. Tell us about the style.����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½


Jacques: We wanted to create a rich, dense world with tons of detail, where players would explore and discover things wherever they looked.

IGN: Did you build a new 3D engine for the game? What new graphic techniques are you pulling off?����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½

Jacques: Yes, a brand new engine called LyN was created alongside Rabbids Go Home and will serve many forthcoming games. It is a revolutionary graphical engine thanks to its structure and technology that make it at once easy to use, effective and evolvable. With LyN, we can create games for both old-gen and next-gen consoles.����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½

For the Wii in particular, the engine maximizes the capacity of the console by managing the totality of the graphical pipeline within the engine itself. The advantage of this engine compared with earlier generations is its capacity to optimize graphical resources without limiting the imaginations of the teams of artists and designers who use it. RGH is the first game out of an Ubisoft studio to benefit from this technology.

IGN: Are you using Wii MotionPlus for any reason?����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½

Jacques: We don't use the Wii MotionPlus, but rest assured, the Wii remote will never be the same again����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¢����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¯����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¿����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½������¯������¿������½����¯�¿�½���¯���¿���½����¯�¿�½������¦ Players will discover a feature that uses the Wii Remote in a creative and technologically revolutionary way, never before seen in a game.

(More at the link)



Posted by gamingeek Wed, 06 May 2009 10:38:53 (comments: 110)
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Fri, 06 Nov 2009 17:54:53

phantom_leo said:

The game has a visual flair all it's own. It's not as "weird" as you would expect a Rabbids game to be. The humans and world are kept simple and clean, kinda like in Katamari, but not quite so "Japanese-ee."

The Rabbids have a good amount of animation to them though to make them stand out that much more. There's over-exaggeration in everything they do. Your shopping cart always looks like it's on the verge of tipping as you skid around corners and such (kinda like a Keystone Cop car), for example. The FMV and cartoon intermissions are a lot of fun too.

Its got some good animation. Do the changes you make to your rabbid show up in the in game cutscenes?


 
Fri, 06 Nov 2009 18:00:43

gamingeek said:

phantom_leo said:

The game has a visual flair all it's own. It's not as "weird" as you would expect a Rabbids game to be. The humans and world are kept simple and clean, kinda like in Katamari, but not quite so "Japanese-ee."

The Rabbids have a good amount of animation to them though to make them stand out that much more. There's over-exaggeration in everything they do. Your shopping cart always looks like it's on the verge of tipping as you skid around corners and such (kinda like a Keystone Cop car), for example. The FMV and cartoon intermissions are a lot of fun too.

Its got some good animation. Do the changes you make to your rabbid show up in the in game cutscenes?


In game, yes. Cutscenes, no.

I never would have thought I was the kind of person who would get a kick out of seeing a squid sitting on a Rabbit's head again, and again, and again...

After tattooing a Skull on the back of the Steel (red-thong) Rabbid, you just have to giggle as he hops in circles and tries to admire his new skin-art on his back!  Nyaa

__________________

A few features that I forgot to mention before:

*It uses the speaker on the Wii-mote for added sound effects (from the Rabbid in the remote)... (BWAAAH!)

*It installs a Rabbid Channel that is used (at least) to upload photos you take in the game.

 
Fri, 06 Nov 2009 18:13:32
What else can you do with the channel?
 
Fri, 06 Nov 2009 18:25:29

gamingeek said:
What else can you do with the channel?

Dunno. I installed it and forgot about it 'til a few moments ago!

 
Fri, 06 Nov 2009 23:53:33
 
Sat, 07 Nov 2009 15:10:17

Review


http://kotaku.com/5398687/rabbids-go-home-review-strip+platforming

Rabbids Go Home mixes the inanity of a good Saturday morning cartoon, the fluid movement of a Mario game (as good as you can get without the jumping), the collecting of ridiculous human stuff of Katamari Damacy and winds up serving a fun, easy comedy.

The game looks and sounds good, and, best of all, surprises with its warped sense of humor. It's another strong Wii game from a non-Nintendo company, adding to what's become an eclectic shelf of small 2009 Wii gems alongside Dead Space Extraction, House of the Dead: Overkill and Deadly Creatures. And this one doesn't even have "dead" in the title.

 
Sun, 08 Nov 2009 02:13:02
NintendoLife has an official Rabbid... Why don't WE have an official Rabbid...?! I'm extremely displeased! Hrm



Oh well. At least we have footage of someone abusing the F*CK out of THEIR Rabbid...
 
Sun, 08 Nov 2009 11:05:42
If we had a Rabbid he would be smoking, drinking and beating some woman up.
 
Sun, 08 Nov 2009 11:39:57

A small sample of what you will be missing if you don't at least try Rabbids Go Home. This is what I refer to as the "Steel and GodMode" clip, btw. Just look at the still pic. You know what I mean...! WinkWink


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