BlizzCast Episode 6

Blizzard Entertainment has released a sixth BlizzCast episode, this time featuring internal World of Warcraft, StarCraft II, and Diablo III interviews. A snip from the D3 Q&A with senior character artist Anthony Rivero:
Bashiok: When you were working on the Diablo II units, what was design and creation process start to finish more or less, and how has that changed for Diablo III?

Anthony: Well the creation process was fairly different, like I said before, a lot of the artists did everything from the ground up. Then there was the sprite rendering part of it, you would have to pre-render your assets, and so basically you'd wait forever for all the stuff to render out, and with the heroes you'd have to render out all of their body parts separately. Things like the gloves and the boots, things that would change on the character. Then you would have to composite those together, for every direction he was rendered in for every frame of animation. So if he's rendered in sixteen different directions and he has a . whatever, an eight frame animation, well you have to go through all that and composite all those separate elements in the right order for it to look correct on the screen. So you don't have an arm that's supposed to be behind the body in front of the body. And. that was a real tedious process.

So thankfully with real time 3D we don't have to worry about that, and that's kind of what I was getting at, with things being a lot easier. Also your animation frame count is not an issue any more. We can have nice fluid, smooth animations now whereas before they were really choppy because, you know, we were only given six or seven frames for a walk cycle. You need a lot more than that to make a convincing walk cycle, but you had to make it look its best within the limitations. So the technical part of it was very different, the creation part of it. I think back then things were a bit more tight-knit and collaborative I guess. You know because the team was smaller, you know when you came up with ideas or designs, there was just a lot more back and forth with designers and artists and programmers. It really felt like everybody was more cohesive in that sense, whereas now the department is bigger, there's more people on the team, it's more specialized. There still is that collaboration, I mean I can get up and go talk to anybody on the team that I want to, but when they're way down the hall you start to get lazy and you don't want to go chit-chat with somebody. You want to get your tasks done. The design process is a little different, but we still, when we come up with an asset now, there's a particular monster needed for an act for instance, before we really start working on the asset we'll get together with a designer, a technical artist, character artist, and producer, anybody that needs to be involved and we'll talk about it and spin ideas around and make sure we can troubleshoot anything we can in the beginning stages. Come up with ideas for how it may die, what else can it do that would be really cool, and we didn't have that kind of organized meeting when we were working on Diablo II or the expansion pack.