Week 15: Final

This week saw many parts of the project wrap up into a completed state, just in time for the ETC Open House we saw on Friday, during which old and new faces came to play BROKE and share their thoughts and what they learned. Let’s take a look at how we got there.

The tech team finished the client tool, allowing Dana Gold to easily input the content for the final three characters (single parent, elder, and illegal immigrant) without having to learn a single iota of programming knowledge. She came in this week to try out the tool, and found it very intuitive and easy to work with, which was a great relief for Team Fortitude.

Team Fortitude shows Dana Gold how to use the client tool

The tech team is also working on our narrative data processing compiler, which helps transform the text-based content into a fully-functioning interactive narrative, the settings app, representing the bank amounts as a piggy bank instead of a numerical value, and the technical documentation. They also managed to fix all remaining UI bugs, which means that now all the features the team wanted are in the game and fully functional!

The art team helped the tech team with all the UI bugs, the box cover, profile icons for the three remaining characters, and changed the previous flood image to include a concerned cow standing on the roof of the car.

The design team worked mostly on documentation of the project, slides for Wednesday’s final presentation, and archive materials. At this point, adding more design would be detrimental to the project, since it has to be done on Friday morning, so that’s most of what the design team will be doing for the rest of the semester.

The documentary team was able to make a rough cut of the documentary. Unfortunately, that rough cut is 29 minutes long, when it’s only supposed to be 15 minutes long, so more cutting and refinement will be necessary in the upcoming week.

The week ended with the annual ETC Open House, which allowed many guests and other students to come to our project room and try out BROKE. Overall, the response was very positive, and while some bugs were discovered, they were fixed by the time the Open House was over. We also put up a poster saying “Something I Learned About Poverty Is…” and encouraged guests to put a sticky note on the poster to answer the question. Here’s what they said:

“I didn’t know homeless shelters have requirements for money goals and timeliness”

“It’s really hard to get out of.”

“No sympathy.” (referring to how nobody has sympathy for those in poverty)

“A lot more people are in danger of being homeless or running out of food than I expected.”

“It helps me live through the situation :)”

“You have to choose between bad choices without knowing what longer term repercussions might be.”

“Your dignity’s worth nothing when you are in poverty.”

“People are not lazy, it’s circumstances which are difficult.” (another guest wrote “ditto” on this one)

“To balance money and your belief (e.g. justice, kindness…) is hard. There are man though choices, but it’s still important to stick to some belief. Even if you really need money.”

“It needs to be discussed.”

“It’s challenging to make minute to minute decisions.”

Overall, it is very encouraging for us to see that overall, people who play BROKE are gaining more empathy for people living with the condition of poverty. That is our overarching transformational goal, after all, so it looks like our game truly is a success! And speaking of transformational games, Sabrina Culyba, author of the Transformational Framework, which we referred to very often in the first month of the project, came to the ETC Open House to play BROKE. She had some small notes of improvement for us, but said that we were doing a good job overall, which was a very good sign for us.

BROKE is seriously wrapping up in this final week of development. Aside from a few minor bug fixes, refinement of the documentary, and our final presentation on Wednesday, BROKE is completely done. Considering the repeating, positive response we’ve had from playtesters and our client alike, it seems like we can definitely call this project a success. See you next week for the very last blog post by Team Fortitude.