Adventures with NPCs Redux: Matteo

Things have been moving forward lately with our NPC development, which has been a very gratifying experience. Watching a character go from a text description to a fully animated and speaking NPC model is something else. And as we move from one character to the next, incorporating each into the game, the whole project really starts to come to life. It sure as hell beats plugging away night after night on the nuances of text parsing.

It takes a lot of steps to go from point A to point B, and a number of people to make it happen, so I thought it might be interesting to review the procedure we went through for each NPC in the game. Vespers has six NPCs: five brothers and one village girl. This way, we can introduce each character while providing a little insight into our development process.

Matteo was the first character we tackled, mostly because he has the smallest part in the game. In the text version of the game, however, there are very few detailed descriptions of the characters, so we didn’t have a lot to go on initially. The one passage in the game that gives some background on his character (which, interestingly, was later removed for the final release) went as follows:

“Ah, Matteo. He was one of the first. Although he is a few years your senior, he remains obedient and helpful. He loves Saint Cuthbert’s, almost as much as you. The loss of the brothers has been especially hard for him. He was as much a father to them as any priest.”

So we began with an older, gentle, fatherly figure, and after some discussion with Jason Devlin (the author), we also decided on a person who is shorter and overweight. We presented this to N.R. Bharathae, our lead artist, who came up with his concept for Matteo.

Matteo concept sketch.

Once we had a good starting point, N.R. set to creating and revising the 3D model, and then applying the textures. We were going for a more realistic appearance to our models and, needless to say, we were very excited with the results.

The Matteo model.

The textures for Matteo's face.

While this was going on, I was also working hard on the voice recordings. After a long process of auditions, I went through the difficult tasks of preparing the scripts, setting up and performing the recording sessions, and then splicing and editing each of the lines into separate WAV and OGG files.

Fortunately, we were able to get a really talented actor, Alan Meyer, to do the voice work for Matteo. I asked each of our voice actors for a head shot, since I thought it would be cool to see each of them beside their final in-game NPC model. Here’s a shot of Alan alongside Matteo, along with a short bio he wrote.

Alan and Matteo. I can see the resemblance.

“As a voice actor, Alan Meyer enjoyed playing a role in Vespers tremendously. During his three decade acting career Alan has appeared in dozens of plays and films. He taught theater and video production classes at Bonneville High, in Ogden, Utah, for over fifteen years. His website Speakingpart.com features his voice acting demos and current resume.”

Finally, bringing him to life was our animator, Shawn Hall. Shawn was new to the Torque system of animation (as was I, of course), so it took us a little while to work out the kinks and the best workflow process. But once we were both comfortable with it, he was able to really breathe life into the model. It’s not easy to show here, but Shawn did a great job with a lot of the little details, including blinking, eyebrow movement, and even some lip sync. We ended up using mostly full body animations for Matteo (unlike some of the other NPCs), since we found little need for additional blend animations. (Shawn has since moved on from the project, but this was all the animation Matteo would need in the game.)

The final result, I think, is a great combination of writing, modeling, texturing, animating, and voice work, the combined work of a small group of really dedicated and talented people. Cue the brief video, for those interested (and sorry for the poor quality – if you watch it at 480p it’s slightly better):

Hopefully that gives you all some idea how we went through the process of developing Matteo from a character in an interactive fiction game into a 3D animated and speaking NPC model. Next time I’ll introduce Constantin, who presented a series of challenges of his own.

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One Comment

  1. Erik Temple
    Posted April 7, 2010 at 7:36 PM | Permalink

    Sweet. I’ve been following these since you were on Garage Games. Looking forward to more!

    –Erik

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