-
Posts
222 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Character Archive
Frequently Asked Questions
Equestrian Empire Character Archive
Golden Oaks Memorial Library
Pony Roleplay Characters
Events
Blogs
Everything posted by Yotes
-
Two new major blogs just went up! A dire financial situation has me in a bind, so it's either boost PAtreon numbers by a LOT or get a job I'm sure to hate while the Battle Gem Ponies release date gets pushed back farther and father...
Check out the new articles!
BGP DevLog #182 (Gotta Gain Marketing Chops)
and
Brainstorming New Patreon Plans, Rewards, & Goals
And be sure to comment your thoughts and ideas. I really wanna hear suggestions on where to go from here.
-
I am endlessly amused by the cubes. And also by how eerily similar the map is to my fan game's map.
I know I'm on a weird little tangent here, but I find it super interesting how I subconsciously formed a world map super similar to the one they're using in Pokemon Quest. To the point where I'm wondering if I've been following some archetype this whole time since I envisioned it way back in high school.
Starting off in the west in a light green meadow near a body of water where a boat could take you who knows where. Lead north into a forest connected to a rocky ridge featuring a river/waterfall and bright orange desert even further up north. A big shrine in the upper middle of the map and a mysterious purple island housing a legendary monster in the lower center of the map that you need to cross the ocean to reach.
Then there's the dried out yellowish fields in the center of the map, connecting to a purple cave. A return to the meadow environment in the east but this time in an off green color with a few scattered islands below. A northern path from the 2nd meadow leads to grayish green spooky zone with a tall dark tower, leading you up a steep climb to the icy cold winter wonderland at the highest northern peak.
The similarities are uncanny!There's gotta be something to this and it's not cuz one copied the other.(I wonder if it's an art principle or a reflection of real geography?)