2,112
edits
m (changing link from http->https) |
m (changing link from http->https) |
||
Line 68: | Line 68: | ||
*Myst III: Exile. After two games set in mostly lifeless worlds, Myst III (under new developers) moved in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAShllUlEK0 a more organic direction]. Notice that some puzzles involve divining the workings of plants and the minds of animals. Of course Oni is pretty much on the other side of the action/thinking spectrum from a game like Myst, but there's still food for thought here. | *Myst III: Exile. After two games set in mostly lifeless worlds, Myst III (under new developers) moved in [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAShllUlEK0 a more organic direction]. Notice that some puzzles involve divining the workings of plants and the minds of animals. Of course Oni is pretty much on the other side of the action/thinking spectrum from a game like Myst, but there's still food for thought here. | ||
*Plants with Eyes. [ | *Plants with Eyes. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wc_Y1IXVSig Just watch it]. As far as I can tell, this was produced for a television show as a sort of throw-away tease segment, but it really stands on its own as a bizarre and super-realistic visualization of the very kind of stuff we might encounter in plants from another world, or plants that were more active than ours. Apparently they started with live-action footage of real plants, and then dressed them up with CG, but the results are surprisingly effective. Then again, some of our real-life plants are pretty impressive too, as seen above. | ||
===Fungi=== | ===Fungi=== |