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Brainstorm your StoryQuest theme. Developing a clear theme will help you make consistent creative decisions and ensure all parts of your StoryQuest work together to provide a cohesive experience. Your theme can evolve as you work, but having a clear starting point will help guide your creative decisions.
Steps
1. Define Your Theme. Write down answers to these questions:
What kind of world does your story take place in? (magical forest, futuristic city, underwater realm, etc.)
What is the overall mood or feeling you want players to experience? (mysterious, hopeful, adventurous, etc.)
How does your main character's goal connect to this world and theme?
Remember: Your theme should be specific. A broad theme like "fantasy" isn't very helpful because fantasy worlds can contain countless different experiences. Instead, try "a lonely wizard's tower" or "underwater fairy kingdom." A specific theme combined with a clear narrative, like "a young apprentice must restore magic to their mentor's abandoned tower" , can make every design decision a bit easier because you know exactly what fits your story.
2. Brainstorm Mini-Game Ideas. Think of 2-3 simple mini-games or challenges that would fit your theme and help tell your character's story. These don't need to be fully designed yet.
3. Capture Your Vision. Create a quick reference for your StoryQuest idea in whatever format works best for you. This could be:
A short paragraph summary
A simple storyboard (3-4 frames showing key moments and player actions)
A single image or mood board that captures your setting
A list of key words and concepts
4. Save Your Work. You'll formalize these ideas into a full Game Design Document in your next task.
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Why this task matters
Brainstorm your StoryQuest theme. Developing a clear theme will help you make consistent creative decisions and ensure all parts of your StoryQuest work together to provide a cohesive experience. Your theme can evolve as you work, but having a clear starting point will help guide your creative decisions.
Steps
1. Define Your Theme. Write down answers to these questions:
Remember: Your theme should be specific. A broad theme like "fantasy" isn't very helpful because fantasy worlds can contain countless different experiences. Instead, try "a lonely wizard's tower" or "underwater fairy kingdom." A specific theme combined with a clear narrative, like "a young apprentice must restore magic to their mentor's abandoned tower" , can make every design decision a bit easier because you know exactly what fits your story.
2. Brainstorm Mini-Game Ideas. Think of 2-3 simple mini-games or challenges that would fit your theme and help tell your character's story. These don't need to be fully designed yet.
3. Capture Your Vision. Create a quick reference for your StoryQuest idea in whatever format works best for you. This could be:
4. Save Your Work. You'll formalize these ideas into a full Game Design Document in your next task.
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