Dragon Kites by Areito Echevarria

This is a prototype interactive toy I made to learn how to build a simple custom physics engine in Javascript and p5.js.

You can play with it here.

You can blow a gust of wind by clicking in the window to move the kites around.

Not sure where this will go but I think it is a fun toy to play with.

Amoeba Blaster!! by Areito Echevarria

"fill your games with love and tiny details"

Play the game here.

Amoeba Blaster!! is a game I made using p5js, a Processing library for Javascript. It was a project for a coding class I just finished on Kadenze. Apart from the text its all procedurally generated, using the Superformula to draw all of the shapes. No sprites used here! I was really happy with the way this turned out, especially the simple moused based interaction. You can fire and strafe just using a mouse click. The gameplay is also inspired by a great talk by Jan Willem Nijman from Vlambeer on game feel, where he talks about filling your game with love and tiny details, definitely worth watching!

Wolf & Bear Club by Areito Echevarria

I'm taking the CalArts course "Game Design: Art and Concepts" on Coursera at the moment. So far I'm really enjoying it. It's very story focused and I'm learning a lot about interactive storytelling. For the first assignment in Fran Krause's class "Intro to Game Design" we had to make a single player game that fits on one piece of paper and requires only 2 dice. Feel free to print it out and play, tell me what you think! Download the pdf here.

Win by helping the wolf escape the castle and reach the shooting star before the tailor throws his scissors and snips out the light. If the scissors get to the star before the wolf you loose, if the wolf gets there first you win! Be quick but don't get caught by the bear, or he will club you!

 

Cacatuidae by Areito Echevarria

My granddad was a magician, and part time butcher. He also kept pet cockatoos. I remember one day going over to his house way out west to visit him. He was in the garage, cutting up frozen beef shanks on his circular saw. The saw was buzzing and screeching and he was getting covered in a fine powder of frozen beef shavings. Seeing me hovering at the door, he flicked off the saw, wiped the beef frosting from his thick rimmed glasses and beckoned me to come over. From the front pocket of his greasy white apron he pulled out a little toy guillotine, sparkling and black, old and worn. "Put your finger in there" he said. I was nervous, but my granddad always had cool junk scattered around the place, like the bowling balls with blue pirate ships on them, the cockatoos that could swear and count to ten, the pile of vintage playboy magazines I had located under a box of smelly old paint thinner. "Ok" I said. I slipped my finger into the dark wooden hole in the base of the rickety little execution machine. He pulled up on the wobbly handle attached to the angled blade. I looked over at the frozen beef shank, stuck deep into the circular saw. He gave me a wink, covered in frozen meat pulp, and slammed his hand down on the blade.