I was lucky enough to be invited to spend this week on work placement at Neon Play, a mobile games developer based in Cirencester, working on a model for their upcoming unannounced title.
This opportunity actually came about when I attended a web chat with the CEO of Neon Play, Oli Christie. I was the only person to turn up for this and was duely rewarded by having my work looked at and invited to a morning at the studio, with the possibility of gaining some work experience. That came to fruition and this is my diary of my week spent at Neon Play.
Day
1:
I left home bright and early for
the first day of my work placement at the Neon Play studio. First up
was the Monday morning meeting, a time for everyone to sit together
and hear about the plans and general goings-on about the place. Once
this mini-meeting was over, I was taken around to meet the Neon Play
by the art lead; everyone seemed really nice and were enthusiastic
about their job and work on the current unannounced project. With the
formalities done with, it was time to sit with the art team and see
what I would be working on for the week.Being shown the current build of the game for the first time was awesome. Just from spending a little time playing around with what had been created so far and hearing plans for the coming weeks, I can tell this new game from Neon Play is destined to be a big hit! I felt lucky to have the chance to work on it with the team for a short while.
There is some stunning work being produced at the studio and the concept work provided for me to work from was no different. Time for the fun to begin! I got stuck straight in to this piece, admittedly a starting a little slowly as I knew only a little about using Maya. By the afternoon I was beginning to get a better grasp of navigating Maya and using its tools. With day one over, I was making fairly good progress on the modelling phase considering.
Day
2:
During day two I continued to model
the asset, trying slight design variations to see which one suited
the purpose, had the strongest silhouette and read the best. Tuesday
afternoon was spent optimising the mesh and getting to grips with
Maya's UV Texture Editor to start the unwrap.
Day
3:
A couple of hours on Wednesday
morning was used to finish unwrapping the mesh from the previous day.
Now it was time to start the texturing! The first challenge was to
get some solid base colours down, that both suited the purpose and
read well in-game with animation. At the end of day three, after
adding some big detail pieces to the texture, it was decided to
change the colour palette ever so slightly. The new version was
looking much better.
Day
4:
Thursday was largely spent working
on the texture for my model, continuously adding new details and
testing them out in-game. Things were starting to come together, just
lots of tweaking with the texture.Towards the end of the day I was called into the board room with the CEO, CTO and lead artist to talk about how I had enjoyed my week at Neon Play. Obviously I had a lot of fun working in the studio, getting to spend the days creating 3d art for games was awesome and something I hope to do full-time in the future. They told me my skills were coming along nicely and they had been fairly impressed with what I had created for them. My texturing work is slightly weaker at the moment, but will improve as I continue to relentlessly work and study. The conversation ended with me being told I could continue to work in the studio on work placement basis if I wanted, helping out with other bits of artwork for the current game. I was really happy with that. It's great to see a company going out of their way to help students like me, giving me some valuable experience and the chance to have an important addition to add to my CV and portfolio!
Day
5:
The final day of my work experience
week was spent polishing the texture maps I had been working on,
continuously iterating to create something slightly improved each
time.By the end of Friday, I had wrapped up work on the model I had been working on for the week. The lead artist seemed to think I had done well, considering the first day and a half was a little slow, trying to get used to using Maya properly for the first time. I was pretty happy with the model too, it was great to see something you have created put into a proper working game!
Just before I left that evening, I said goodbye to some of the team and thanked the artists for helping me out for the week. I had a great time at Neon Play and loved helping out on the fantastic game in the pipeline.
The moral of this blog is to go that extra mile, put yourself out there and show your enthusiasm. How much do you really want this? By doing so, you will eventually get great opportunities like this.