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Dune: Awakening may eventually take players beyond Arrakis to other planets"I would love to make a scene on Giedi Prime," says Funcom exec producer
“I would love to make a scene on Giedi Prime,” says Funcom exec producer
Image credit:Funcom
Image credit:Funcom
A couple of decades ago there was a period when all videogames and especially all Unreal Engine videogames had to be brown and grey and dingy. “The Gears of Warrification of graphics,” we used to call it, huddled up in the chest-high trenches with our Xbox 360 controllers.SurvivalMMODune: Awakeningthreatens to bring that back in a big way: the novel and films on which it’s based take place, after all, on an entire planet made of sand.
Developers Funcom have various plans for sprucing up the aesthetic, however. For one thing, parts of Awakening are set underground, where there’s actual, canonical vegetation and thus, a wider range of colours. For another, it’s possible Dune: Awakening will ultimately leave the dunes behind and whisk us away on a journey to another planet.
“In the books of Frank Herbert, it’s quite clear that there’s quite a lot of vegetation in places that are hidden out of the way of the sandstorms and crevices between stones,” Scott Junior, the game’s executive producer, told me during a roundtable interview at GDC. These sources of underground flora aren’t just for decoration, of course – they’re harvestable materials, with some of the most valuable being located in eco laboratories that have been abandoned for centuries.
“Yes, we are using that to spice up the world - sorry for the pun, but to get some different environments,” Junior continued. “Because when you’re on Dune, there’s a lot of brown, there’s a lot of rocks, there’s a lot of sand. And we want to break that up and show some either more tropical environments or more alien takes on things.”
“We can potentially go to other planets post launch, but it’s not in the launch offering,” Junior went on. “But yeah, if you see in the second movie, I would love to make a scene on Giedi Prime withthe black and white thingthey did there. I thought that was really striking.”
Also striking: the spectacle of Dune: Awakening’s sandworms in action, which somewhat compensates for the slightly desperate feeling I get playing yet another survival game in this, the year 2024. You can read my full thoughts from the Awakening GDC presentationover here.