Hey all, I'm Clint "pfunked" Bellanger. I found this site through deviantart, where I have all of my stuff under the BY-CC-SA licence. I'm excited to see my work posted here as well.
I'm a software developer by trade; I work in a university library writing search code and various automation apps. I do a bit of 3D art and game engine programming in my free time.
Most of my relevant work is in these forms:
- Low-rez 3D objects, usually static meshes but I've been doing some rigged stuff lately. Most of my objects will be UV mapped but untextured.
Why do each game projects build own repository for arts?
This morning, I want submit the tiles from lincity-ng http://lincity-ng.berlios.de/wiki/. Then, I realized a fact what if a project update very frequently. the arts submited here would be out-of-date very quick.
It seems to me like a large portion of the many "free to play" RPGs in some cases have surprisingly decent art - but, either the programming, the interface or the gameplay kinda sucks. I made this observation more or less exclusively from Granado Espada (Sword of the new world), which have rather enjoyable music and good if stereotyped graphics. But something about the interface/gameplay turned me off enough to not want to play the game. Have you had similiar experiences?
EDIT: see "sanity check" below. While this list might work as a feature list for a ground-up application, the sanity check takes a much more pragmatic approach.
An artpack is one of (but not both at the same time):
Monster2 contains mostly BSD-licensed art and sound. I talked to the main developer who provided me with a list of authors (for credit).
If you want to help me upload some of the stuff (I won't begin very soon I'm sure) it'd be nice if you specifically explained here what you want to take care of ("I'll upload all of XYZ's works" or "I'll upload the content of the XYZ directory").
I think for now we should leave out the sound effects because I have reservations (what do you think about sound legality? read IRC log below..)
I notice I'm getting a lot of hits from Bing lately. Only, those hits I'm getting have a fake referrer string with single word searches for generic terms like "audio" and "openid." What's more, these hits all come from your IP address range, *and* they identify themselves as Internet Explorer 6 (an 8-year-old browser which should be de-supported).