For anyone who is on the CCLP4 staff
#81
If we want to do something right now for CCLP4, it'd be best just to have somewhere here on CCZone where we could have a list of all sets eligible for it (if and when it happens). So basically opening submissions. Also, forget me for the CCLP4 staff for now, I just don't think it's going to work for me in my college years Slight smile
#82
Obviously, this year, I have close to no time to devote to something like that, so if it's pushed forward this year (which I don't recommend for obvious reasons mentioned countless amounts of times before by several people), I won't be able to be an efficient part of said staff. But who knows next year?
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Teeth "We are after all in the future, where the past is king and the paste is ming." -raocow
#83
If being on staff means being even LESS helpful than I was for CCLP1 -- count me in!

BTW, we could just "open submissions" and let them languish for a couple years -- like CCLP3 did.
"Bad news, bad news came to me where I sleep / Turn turn turn again" - Bob Dylan
#84
I probably won't be on the CCLP4 staff, but I won't say no for sure. I think the difficulty should be around CCLP2 and CCLP3. Invalid tiles can be used for some good concepts, but it's no longer the norm anymore.
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#85
I've said in the past that we don't really know what the future holds when it comes to future CCLPs, community preferences, community makeup, or design preferences, but I think that also needs to be tempered with the notion that deciding what kind of set we as a community want to make now will also help inform what people submit for it in the days to come. To a large extent, it does work both ways.

It's been almost five months since CCLP1's release, and the amount of time most people took to solve it was not nearly as long as what was required for CCLP2 or 3. We're slowly starting to see level design filling up the community's time once again. We're beginning to discuss what kinds of levels we want to see in CCLP4, at least from what we have available. So I don't think it'll hurt to talk about what CCLP4 could be, as long as our expectations aren't terribly set in stone just in case tastes and preferences happen to change along the way.

After serving on two CCLP staffs, I think what should be done in the future should make the process as least time-consuming for the next staff as possible. Tongue My recommendation is to go ahead and hold this discussion and set tentative goals and guidelines for what CCLP4 should be as the next official level set: something generally agreeable that's also fairly flexible. I'm thinking very general guidelines here: ruleset compatibility, whether or not levels should have borders, what spectrum of difficulty is welcome, etc. Then, go ahead and announce here on CCZone that submissions are open. This will [a] encourage designers who haven't yet submitted material to build levels with the guidelines in mind, much like what was done with CCLP1; and start compiling a list of submitted sets. As a community, we've also grown quite adept at locating busts and compatibility issues in levels, so playing / testing them without a staff in place to address these issues before anything else is done shouldn't be difficult. It will also give people who don't have time to be on the CCLP4 staff or who are uncertain about their involvement in the future a chance to participate and contribute. At the very least, those who are very intentional about submitting material with the guidelines in mind can receive support for these problems immediately rather than wait to be contacted by the staff years down the road. It also frees up the staff from having to re-test everything again.



I think whenever the staff is formed should be around the time the community believes there are enough levels in the submission pool from which a voting process or some form of community-backed level selection can take place. Personally, I don't think we should wait too long for this to happen - maybe cap off the submissions at a number like 1500, give or take a bit. CCLP1 had a limited number of levels on which the community voted, which made variety in the set itself much easier to attain. (Variety seems to be growing as a level design trend anyway these days...maybe because designers are finally realizing that less homogeneity within their submissions tends to mean a greater chance of inclusion in the finished product? Slight smile ) CCLP2 had even fewer levels available when it was created, and despite its flaws that many like to point out, it was far from homogenous. Several factors should be involved in the formation of the staff: at least a few people should have been active community members throughout the submission process, all should be knowledgeable about the game and its rulesets, all should possess some degree of objectivity, maturity, ability to work with others in a team for a few years, etc. By the time the staff is selected, submissions can be closed, and those on the staff who have been around the most, are familiar with the formation of the set-defining guidelines, and have helped with the testing of the levels throughout the submission process can help decide what is included in the voting or selection process that's designed to inform the staff's final choices. Then, the community can get involved again in whatever method the staff has in mind.



Thoughts?
#86
Quote:

I'm thinking very general guidelines here: ruleset compatibility, whether or not levels should have borders, what spectrum of difficulty is welcome, etc. Then, go ahead and announce here on CCZone that submissions are open.
I think MS and regular Lynx, pedantic optional has the most appeal without being restrictive-I've seen a lot of good level ideas that in pedantic would require a ton of shenanigans to make work-if they even could. Personally, I think CCLP4 should model its difficulty after that of CCLP2-start off with some slightly more complex levels than, say, CC1 and CCLP1, and just scale up from there. The last few levels could approach late CCLP3 difficulty, since on their own and surrounded by shorter and easier levels, I think those would really shine in a community set. Nothing like Avalanche or YCTaOFNT, though Tongue

Borders should be up to the designer I think-for the most part, my levels have borders but every once in a while I make one without due to wanting a certain aesthetic (i.e., water everywhere) and then I give the player flippers as part of the level.

Quote:

I think whenever the staff is formed should be around the time the community believes there are enough levels in the submission pool from which a voting process or some form of community-backed level selection can take place. Personally, I don't think we should wait too long for this to happen - maybe cap off the submissions at a number like 1500, give or take a bit.
The CCLP1 voting packs had 1,647 levels total-were these picked by the staff or the community? How big of a drawing pool for those levels were there? Depending on the actual process, 1500 may not be close to enough for a "first cut". I will say that the CCLP1 voting packs have been quite manageable, and breaking up the sets into 50 level anonymized chunks seems like the ideal solution-if not very close to it. It just comes down to what method of generating them is wanted, and that's where I think there is no perfect way to do it.

Purely community nominated levels turns it into a popularity contest of the designer (mostly) over the merits of the levels themselves. Having the designers put forth a certain amount of levels up to a point could work, but could also work against variety-and essentially makes every level have to pass through a double sieve. Perhaps if this bar was set very high it could work (maybe 100 max), but even then, there's a lot of good levels out there.

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#87
Borders? Shouldn't be required, but the majority of levels that make it in probably will have them. We could always take the CCLP1 route and add borders if possible.

Rulesets? No one is makes MS only levels anymore (other than like Zane and I), so sure, make it non-pedantic Lynx compatible. I wouldn't be upset if it weren't though.

Difficulty? Whatever the community votes in. I'd be sort of disappointed if there was some arbitrary elimination of levels for CCLP4 before voting starts. It served its purpose with CCLP1. There really isn't an abundance of difficult levels out there anymore. All the difficult Madhav and pieguy levels that are decent are in CCLP3, and no other designers design at their difficulty level anymore.

Zane? He's pretty cool.
You should probably be playing CC2LP1.

Or go to the Chip's Challenge Wiki.
#88
Quote:Purely community nominated levels turns it into a popularity contest of the designer (mostly) over the merits of the levels themselves.
That has always been an issue I was strongly fighting against, but hey, ultimately, biases can't be overturned, sadly.

Quote:breaking up the sets into 50 level anonymized chunks seems like the ideal solution-if not very close to it. It just comes down to what method of generating them is wanted, and that's where I think there is no perfect way to do it.
We generated them randomly, so yeah it was as good as what was there.

Quote:There really isn't an abundance of difficult levels out there anymore. All the difficult Madhav and pieguy levels that are decent are in CCLP3, and no other designers design at their difficulty level anymore.
That is true, there are some around but the global thing shouldn't be overwhelmed by their number, so we're good there.
Hello'v'ryone's'is' rockdet Ænigma Mælström (any word with æ because it's funny), master of non sequitur buckets!
My YouTube Channel
Rock-Alpha(It's a great game, Bill) 65 levels, including "Voices" and the world-infamous famous "Bloblake"!
Rock-Beta (You should try it, Bill) 50 levels, including "Unicorn Rabbit" and "The Sedna Suite" odyssey!
Rock-Gamma (Woah, really, Bill?!) 40 levels, including "Uncle duo ha ha ha ha ha" and many other surprises and what the actual f*** moments!
Teeth "We are after all in the future, where the past is king and the paste is ming." -raocow
#89
Quote:The CCLP1 voting packs had 1,647 levels total-were these picked by the staff or the community? How big of a drawing pool for those levels were there? Depending on the actual process, 1500 may not be close to enough for a "first cut". I will say that the CCLP1 voting packs have been quite manageable, and breaking up the sets into 50 level anonymized chunks seems like the ideal solution-if not very close to it. It just comes down to what method of generating them is wanted, and that's where I think there is no perfect way to do it.


If I counted correctly, there were 4,484 levels across the sets in the submission pool for CCLP1. What we did before voting was to narrow down the list by eliminating levels that fit into the following categories:

[1] Levels that were automatically ineligible by default: in other words, levels that were already in another CCLP, levels that contained some sort of inappropriate content in their design (yes, believe it or not, we had to deal with this), special-purpose levels that would not be appropriate for general voting like cyphers and credits lists, dummy levels, blank levels, levels that were superseded by newer versions in a newer set, levels created after the submission deadline, and levels that were specifically requested to be removed from voting by their designers.

[2] Levels that were incompatible with one of the two rulesets and could not be fixed without basically constructing an entirely new level.

[3] Levels that were determined by the staff to be too trivial, too difficult, of poor design quality, or any other characteristics that didn't make them a good fit for CCLP1.

As part of a check / balance system, we made sure that levels that fit into categories [2] and [3] had a chance to be nominated back into the voting process by non-staff community members who didn't want to see them eliminated. The grand total, after all was said and done, was the remaining 1,647.

I didn't get into the reasons for suggesting a cap of 1,500 in the previous post because, honestly, that could be an entire blog post. But I'll try to summarize my thoughts: whenever CCLPx is released, the disappointed designers who didn't get levels they wanted to see in the set are often told, "Don't worry; there's always CCLPx+1!" That is true - I mean, just look at the almost decade-long gap between Lazy Hourglass's original appearance in CCLP2 voting and its eventual induction into CCLP3. But after working on building a couple of CCLPs, I can say with some certainty that this is more or less the exception to the rule. CCLPs are generally a reflection of the levels and level design preferences of the time, which are always in flux as people come and go, and new official sets affect the tastes of players and the tendencies of designers. By the time the next set is constructed, you're dealing with new levels built after the paradigm shift that will more than likely garner quite a bit more praise than the material of yesteryear. Perhaps it won't be the case with CCLP4 because there are a lot of CCLP1-inappropriate levels that would be given more positive attention now, but this would be even more reason to take a good look at what already we have and, by extension, what we need for variety's sake. This is what's been done for another community-produced puzzle game I've been involved with: the designer put out a call for level submissions, then he gradually adjusted that prompt to account for the kinds of levels that weren't nearly as well-represented.

Don't get me wrong - I'm the last one to suggest that the CC community turn into a CCLP-producing factory rolling out a new set every several months. But I think we need to pay attention to just how fast levels are being made. More than that, I'd hate to see more people walk away disappointed after not getting something they made in an official set and then submitting the same material next time just to see it get overshadowed by newer levels and the "contemporary" design tactics of the day after so much time has passed. (Thankfully, the voting pack system can help with this a bit.) I'm not a fan of abandoning the formal submission / permission-granting process either, since increasing the size of the pool with each CCLP will just get more cumbersome for the staff and the community at large. The CCLP3 process is a perfect example of just how much more difficult it can be to manage the project when the submission process is open for so long and contains so many levels. Nor am I a fan of ditching the quality-based method of level selection for a designer "fairness"-based method, since doing so can easily compromise the quality of the overall product. So by process of elimination, that leaves limiting the submission pool as the only viable option to ensure that [a] the possibility of making it into CCLPx+1 is a bit more of a likely possibility, and the testing / voting / assembly processes do not take a ridiculous amount of time.
#90
Another interesting option that seems relatively unexplored: Upgrade Tile World Lynx to work with invalid tiles in the same way that they work in MS. Obviously this wouldn't really be Lynx anymore so it might be worthwhile to make a new name for it, but keep the spirit of animated graphics and all the usual Lynx features.

I'd also love to see some Chuck's Challenge integration. Since it'll likely be 3 years or more before we see anything of a new official set, there would be plenty of time to convince Chuck to add the last few CC1 tiles to the game. Then the staff could take liberty to port the levels to the game, or outsource that job to the original level designers if they want to do so.

Borders? Nah, if the community wants them then we'll have something similar to CCLP1 where most levels already had them.

Difficulty? I like the idea of not having any restrictions for now, because the community doesn't seem to have much motivation left for extremely difficult levels but wants levels more challenging than those seen in CCLP1. But we can see how this changes as the level submissions change and discuss accordingly.

Me for CCLP4 staff? Only if you pay me for all my video game needs for my time on the staff. Teeth


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