The Brief is rather informal, yet gets the main message of
what is expected of you across succinctly and clearly. You are expected to
create a new Dungeons and Dragons adventure set, complete with play area tile
maps, characters, monsters, treasures and traps, and some rules for the
adventure. It must be able to include other Dungeons and Dragons content from
any book from the 4th edition core books. It must be either loosely
or completely based on mythology from within the British Isles, using
characters and monsters from legend or myth, or even some from real life, and areas
related to the United Kingdom. The stories too must fit in with British
mythology, or at least be loosely based.
This brief is simple, and shows the time you have and the money you will
be allowed, and what kind of attitude they would expect the team that would
work on this to be like towards the subject (i.e. Enthusiastic) and how they
expect you to present your work. Overall, I think this brief is a decent one,
but could use some tweaking if it was to be put into the actual industry. Some
of the contractual terms are a bit loose.
For project roles, we would have to hire Concept artists for
the artwork we would want to put on the character cards, and the artwork we may
want to put on the map tiles. We will obviously need an expert in the rules and
playing of Dungeons and Dragons, who will advise the entire task force on how
the game works and how our designs and characters will fit in with the game. We
would need graphics designers to create and make the cards and tiles, and some
equipment to create the prototypes. We would need some researchers to find out
information on character ideas that we wish to do, and an Administrator to help
the team to keep on task.
The Pay checks would
have to be fair; I would say about £30 a week for the artist or less if there’s
more than one, £40 per week for the advisor, a lump sum of £100 for each of the
graphics team who create the cards and tiles, or a negotiated fee, and a spare
amount of around £700 for the equipment, as printers and graphic design
products do not cost much. And finally a pay check of around £50 a week for the
Admin.
This is a Gantt chart of our plan;
Our planned response would be a booklet of the British based
adventure, based on the last quests of King Arthur and his knights of the round
table, an adventure that has been lost to history. The booklet would involve the
rules, story, and details of the quest. It would also contain artwork to show
what the quest might look like, and artwork maps showing the ‘land’ of the
quest. It would have to contain the usually mandatory regulations, such as
safety instructions and copyrights. We would also create prototypes of the
models of characters we create, using plastic, clay or cheap metal, and the
character cards that would come with it, which would contain the statistics and
artwork of the character and would be vital to the set. The prototype will also
contain map tiles for small areas of the quest, as it would not be necessary to
create all the tiles until the planning is complete and the prototype is
successful to save money and time. The tiles will be fully coloured and
complete, with planned areas, but yet can be lain out in random ways. We will
also be creating monsters for the quest, and like the other characters they
will have cards and prototype models. They like the rest of this product will
be based on British mythological creatures and monsters that King Arthur might
have been said to have fought. And that
would cover all the requirements for the brief so far.
