Rose and Time
Developer(s)Sophie Houlden
Composer(s)Kevin MacLeod
Platform(s)iOS, Android, Ouya, Windows, Mac, Linux
ReleaseApril 2012
Genre(s)Puzzle-platform

Rose and Time is a puzzle-platform game by British video game developer Sophie Houlden with music by Kevin MacLeod. The player navigates 3D levels while avoiding previous versions of themselves created by time travel. Rose and Time was released in April 2012 for iOS and Android after being created as part of the Indie Buskers Game Jam.[1] It was also released on Ouya in July 2013.[2] The game concept originated from a competition idea submitted by Scott Thomas Smith.[3][4]

Gameplay

The player controls Rose, a young girl in pursuit of a time crystal which she believes will give her the ability to understand time travel, and rescue her parents who are trapped in a time loop. Each stage consists of a series of floating platforms and mechanisms she must navigate to reach the crystal. Upon reaching the crystal, you travel back in time to the start of the level, to find yourself and the crystal are in different positions, and you now have to avoid your past self (and her line of sight) to reach the crystal without causing a time paradox. Many later levels involve managing several versions of your past self, and using them to hold buttons activating doors and platforms.[5]

Aside from moving, the only actions Rose can perform are covering her eyes (to create blind spots for her future selves to pass through)[5] and rewinding time to an earlier point to correct mistakes.[6]

Ouya controversy

In September 2013, Sophie voluntarily withdrew the game from the Ouya marketplace, citing problems with the mishandling of the Ouya "Free the Games Fund" controversy, and assorted missteps by the company.[7] The story was widely circulated in the gaming press, and further fueled criticism of the fund.[8][9][10]

A month later, Sophie revealed that she and several other developers had been in talks with Ouya boss Julie Uhrman, and that the terms of the free the games fund had been changed as a result.[11] Satisfied the matter was resolved, she returned the game to the Ouya marketplace. Sophie also expressed regret for setting up the initial blog post to become "a story" and criticized game journalists for twisting the removal post to "fit [their] narrative."[12][13]

References

  1. "Rose & Time".
  2. "Rose and Time on Ouya".
  3. "Rose & Time".
  4. "Theneonheart - Professional, Writer | DeviantArt". 17 June 2011.
  5. 1 2 "Rose and Time Review".
  6. "Rose and Time".
  7. "Rose and Time no longer on Ouya".
  8. "Rose and Time pulled from Ouya marketplace by developer over company's response to free the games fund controversy". 11 September 2013.
  9. "Ouya Finally Responds to Free the Games Criticism, Upsets Everyone". 11 September 2013.
  10. "Indie Devs Upset by Ouya 'Free the Games Fund' Stance". 11 September 2013.
  11. "Rose and Time back on Ouya".
  12. "Developer returns Rose and Time to Ouya store".
  13. "Rose and Time returns to Ouya after dev accepts Free the Games fund changes". Eurogamer. 24 October 2013.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.