Simple Build 20230327 and Melee Prototype Release

Simple logo with a chmmr running in the melee prototype

It’s been a long, long time coming but we’re finally releasing new tools and content for our extremely patient and supportive public. If you’ve never dived into our in-development development tool, Simple, or tried to check out and run our Super Melee prototype, now is a great time to give it a test if you’re willing to walk through some rickety, rocky stuff. Our hope is that, with this release, some people will have success being able to play networked Super Melee together. We still have oodles of work to do, and our documentation leaves a lot to be desired, but we hope with the help of our community, we’ll be able to get some people off the ground.

The most exciting part of this release for the layperson may access to our repaired networking functionality. We had it working internally for a long time but had a lot of challenges actually getting everything out the door for all of you. About a week ago, we did a live test on Friday’s stream with a community member who successfully hopped into melee with Dan, playing some Melee all the way from San Francisco to New Zealand!

The short and sweet guide to getting up and running on your Windows device is:

  • Grab Simple from https://pistolshrimp.itch.io/simple and extract it somewhere.
  • Run the included content_installer.exe in the install/ directory.
  • Open simple.exe , load the melee sim, and press play!

Below is a video of Dan walking through the steps, and you can also see more in-depth, but likely out-of-date and still incomplete, documentation on GitHub.

Does it work? Did you have any problems? We want to know! Please join us on Discord in the #simple channel and let us know!

Watch our live streams on Twitch to see Dan using Simple in the creation of UQM2 and learn how to use it, yourself!

Tool Release Notes

For the detail oriented or those already familiar with Simple, here are the release notes for the latest Simple build:

  • Breaking Changes:
    • viewer data changed from ini/rawtext to json. See example content (https://github.com/pistolshrimpgames/simple-content) for usage.
    • tool ini config now stored in User/ subdirectory within install. To preserve your simple.ini file, move it into User/ before running simple.exe.
  • viewer
    • Better GUI support (on-screen, dialogs) via CEGUI
    • Initial logging support (viewer.log)
    • Data now in JSON
    • Basic “off-screen” indicators and mini-map support for melee
  • simple
    • Continuous collision detection for physics.
    • Wrapping collision detection for physics.
    • UI: Terser display of lines of script, using icons rather than words in some places.
    • UI: Ctrl+H toggle display of unchanged inherited properties.
    • UI: Find in script.
    • UI: Enumeration and bit-flag support.
    • UI: Save/Load of running game in simple.
    • UI: ‘Conjure’ support in complex property initialization.
    • UI: Breakpoint support in complex property initialization.
    • UI: Backdrop color setting for script view window.
    • UI: CSV file support to consume definition batches (presumably from a spreadsheet).

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Incoming Hyperwave Intercept

Melnorme Alien

From: Melnorme InfoRelay Prime Trade Network <noreply@besttradersever.nafs.mel>
To: <recipients undisclosed>
Date: 3-8-2163
Subj: Hyperwave Intercept

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We of the Melnorme Ultra-Trade Value Complex are always striving to maximize engagement opportunities for InfoRelay Prime traders like yourselves. Our unparalleled information-gathering network uses vastly sophisticated and, dare we say, TERRIFYINGLY SECRET techniques to scour the cosmic aether for interesting data, and it has come upon a document which we think you will find VERY interesting.

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With sincerest wishes that you always meet your quarterly guidance,

Trade Master Burnt Umber
Melnorme Ultra-Trade Value Complex

Comment and follow along on Patreon!

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Studio Updates – End of Year 2022

Captain and two grandchildren from the ending sequence of The Ur-Quan Masters

Itโ€™s that time of the year again. You know, the time when people say โ€œitโ€™s that time of the year again,โ€ which could arguably be said at any time of the year. But we usually canโ€™t. In December, we have collectively acknowledged that this is really the time to say the phrase. Donโ€™t believe us? Go on, try saying it during your next social gathering in May and watch the confusion on the faces of others.

At this time of the year, we at Pistol Shrimp have a few special things going on we wanted to share with you as the year with the most number of 2โ€™s in it during our lifetime comes to a close.

Studio Holiday

The Spathi High Council from The Ur-Quan Masters
The Pistol Shrimp Team IRL

First off, Pistol Shrimp will be formally โ€œclosedโ€ from December 16th until January 16th for various holiday breaks. If you want to reach out, some of the team will likely be lurking around our Discord. Dan, who covers most of our communications, will be taking a long-delayed trip to the jungle where he will instead be communing with various animal species and hopefully avoiding death. If he doesnโ€™t come back, he wants you to remember him by his final words, โ€œBoy it sure would be funny if this blog post was the last time anyone ever heard from me.โ€ Please also abide by his request for his funeral: pay 3 dancers to pop out of the ground dressed as zombies and dance โ€œThriller,โ€ interrupting what he is sure will be a quite moving eulogy. Anyway.. if you donโ€™t hear back from us for a bit, now you know why. If you donโ€™t hear back for a really long time, boy that would suck (especially for Dan).

2022 in Review

Secondly, we wanted to do a little retrospective on what we accomplished this year together! Thereโ€™s far too much to list in its entirety, so weโ€™ll try to sum it up with a few big ones.

For The Ur-Quan Masters 2

  • We created a feature-complete implementation of the foundational gameplay from UQM! Hyperspace, a starmap, interplanetary space, approach, orbital view, planetside, resource gathering, procedural system generation, and alien conversations.
  • We prototyped new gameplay loops we want to try mixing in the Adventure mode for the player, like trading posts, fleet ship upgrades, flying fleet ships through hyperspace, and traversal mechanics to get around the starmap.
  • We have functional, co-operative Adventure mode play and have prototyped new paradigms to make UQM2 even more fun to play with friends, like exploring how players might have different capabilities, how we handle defeat scenarios, and looking at what were previously timed events racing against the clock of a single player (the Kohr-Ah would like a word with you).
  • We implemented all the UQM ships โ€” except the Slylandro Probe, which you broke in the first game with the self-destruct sequence โ€” for our Super Melee prototype. Some of them, like the Chmmr, Arilou, Spathi, and Kohr-Ah even became prototypes for how we will be doing art and audio.
  • We prototyped additional game modes for Super Melee to understand what it would take to have fun with more than 2 ships/players: from a 4 player free-for-all, to separate teams with multiple players, to cooperative experiences players could play against AI enemies.
  • We support all of this through online, serverless network play for end users, and even tested a simple proof of concept of our technology live with viewers on Twitch.

For Pistol Shrimp

  • We launched our Patreon! This was the very first step we took toward funding our studio and projects, and we are so honored by the generous support and engagement from the community.
  • We started a Discord server as a community gathering place. While our subreddit was good for talking in slow-time with structured questions, getting instant communication going and pausing our heavy Q&A posting was a big step forward for us.
  • We released our in-development tools and content (including our Super Melee prototype), freely available for anyone to play with or use to create their own things. While weโ€™ve been behind on updates at the time of writing, some community members created their own experiments, from ships for Melee to their own, made-up games. The tools are very nascent and rough around the edges, but they are what we are using to make and power UQM2.
  • We started our Pistol Shrimp Podcast series, both as a thank you to our Patreon supporters and as a way for everyone to learn a little about us and game development! Whether itโ€™s the history behind UQM, how we think about creating games, insights into UQM2โ€™s development, or just hearing from the people working on games, we were excited to create something new to share.
  • We continued to stream live development of UQM2 on Twitch with Dan and Fred. All of the parts of UQM2 detailed above were implemented or iterated upon live on Twitch for everyone to see. Twitch chat even influenced the creation of things, live, making everyone truly a part of our day-to-day development. If you miss the streams, VODs are always available on Vimeo.
  • We celebrated UQMโ€™s 30th Anniversary in November! We collected stories, fan creations, and a testimonial or two from other developers, highlighting them for everyone to enjoy. We shared special interviews with Erol Otus and George Barr, releasing high res scans of George’s original UQM art and some UQM2 concepts. We gathered members of the original UQM team for a live stream with x33n on Twitch on the 30th. Everyone also tried their best to help the Talking Pet.

While everyone certainly wants to see and play the final game, all of these are massive accomplishments for our still-small team. We couldnโ€™t have done this without the help of our community. Whether you support us on Patreon or Twitch, participate in our development discussions, or just follow along with our updates: thank you for being on the journey with us.

A Huge Thank You

In that vein, we have some notes the team wrote to share with you:

From Dan

I realize you hear from me all the time in text or in my live form on stream, but I wanted to speak a little more personally for just a moment โ€” ok, viewers of our stream know I donโ€™t exactly hold back there, either, but not in our blog posts! I love games, but I intended to leave game development for good. Then the opportunity for Pistol Shrimp arose, with the chance to do things differently: making a game and a studio alongside a community! You and I both have access to tools, interactions, and creations that might normally never see the light of day. I am so proud of what weโ€™ve been able to do transparently with all of your support. Thank you for believing in us and what weโ€™re doing.

From Ken

It’s been a blast working on this game and these tools with my fellow Pistol Shrimpers: Dan, Paul, and Fred. Beyond that, it always amazes me (and fills up my heart!) to see the passion of you UQM fans — both for the original and the sequel. I’m glad we (well, mostly Dan!) are including you in what’s going on and eliciting input, reactions, questions, and answers as we all go on our journey together. Some things can (and should?) be “secret” (to avoid spoilers), but everyday trials, tribulations, successes, and laughter should be celebrated as widely as possible. I hope you’ve felt included, because without you, there would be no game! Thanks for supporting us and continuing to believe in us. It is most appreciated.

From Fred

Iโ€™ve been making games at other peopleโ€™s behest for too long! The Ur-Quan Masters (well maybe the Horde) was the last game that we made the way we wanted to make it. Finding a time, a place, and support from like-minded colleagues and supporters where this is once again possible is an unexpected gift after all this time. Iโ€™ve made this comparison before: I feel a bit like Odysseus must have felt. After the Trojan War (Ur-Quan Masters), he thought heโ€™d quickly return home. It didnโ€™t exactly work out that way and after many intervening years and adventures he eventually made it back to Ithaca. So thanks to all of you for keeping the home fires burning and welcoming us back. I think weโ€™d like to stay awhile.

From Paul

*ASK THEM ABOUT THE FLOWERS* *SO BEAUTIFUL* *WHEREโ€™S MY SPACESHIP?!* Hey, what happened?! In all seriousness: Paul is currently unavailable at time of writing and definitely not working on mind control.

What’s next for Pistol Shrimp?

Lastly, seeing the entire next year with certainty is too challenging, but we do want to share a bit of our outlook on what we want to accomplish in the near term when we return:

  • Updated Tool & Content Releases: Our initial takes at releasing our tools (Simple) and content (test content and Super Melee prototype) were good, but we have learned a bit about sustaining them. We have ideas and look forward to developing better processes.
  • Community QA & Playtesting: We want the most crucial parts of our game, especially the parts over the network, to not just function but be fun too! Our unique community, livestream, and publicly available tools offer us a chance to validate that long before the game is even done. Look forward to more information on how weโ€™ll be doing this and how to participate.
  • Pistol Shrimp Podcast: This is an obvious one, but we enjoy producing these and we hope you enjoy them too. We recently were able to syndicate it via distribution platforms, and we look forward to creating more for you.
  • Asset Creation: Probably obvious for those of you watching the development streams and VODs, but we have not been focusing much on the creation of what we call assets (art, audio, visual effects, etc.). This is largely due to our very small team size and its respective disciplines, but also part of how we have been working. We are prioritizing being able to make fun, engaging gameplay and โ€” especially for UQM2 โ€” a story weโ€™re excited for players to experience. We are trying to be prudent about creating expensive assets for parts of the game that may not make it to the finished game. Many parts are now becoming ready for this important coat of paint, so we hope to share some more with you as we create it.
  • Funding: We want to be able to pay the people working on the game, especially those whom we will be bringing in to work with us on the asset side. Our Patreon page was an amazing beginning for the team, but a crucial next step for UQM2 is also being able to fund its entire development. We have been focusing on this internally and want to solidify our next steps to help us see UQM2 through to completion.

Those are just some of what we want, but weโ€™re also interested in what you want! If you follow our Discord, subreddit, Patreon, podcast, or Twitch channel, what things would you like to see happen in those spaces? How would you like to engage with us or your fellow community? We want to know. Tell us on Discord, Reddit, or Patreon.

We wish you happy holidays and look forward to being back and more alive than ever in the new year. Weโ€™re excited to continue the journey with all of you.

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Pistol Shrimp Podcast – Now Syndicated Everywhere!

Pistol Shrimp Podcast cover and logo

Back in my day we were lucky to catch our favorite shows on HyperWave channel 44! These days when we just want you to pour our thoughts directly into your grey matter โ€” definitely not mind-controlling you in the process โ€” we need additional tactics. By popular demand, our Pistol Shrimp Podcast (previously just hosted directly on Patreon) is now syndicated across the internet universe.

New episodes (apart from the anniversary specials which we were too excited to share) will still be available early to Patreon supporters, but you should now be able to listen wherever you are:

Questions, comments, or mind control success stories? Talk to us on Reddit or our Discord!

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Community Story Showcase – 30 Years of The Ur-Quan Masters

Captain and two grandchildren from the ending sequence of The Ur-Quan Masters

At the start of November, we asked our community to share anything and everything they had to help us celebrate 30 years since the original release of The Ur-Quan Masters, including a request for stories. We wanted to highlight some of your own tales for how you experienced the game and what you have to say after all this time. This is just a small sampling of some of the favorite things we heard.

It’s amazing it’s been that long. I turned 13 in November 1992. A friend of mine had a copy of the game, and I spent days at his house, us playing it through, marking down coordinates and looking for hints in dialogue. Hour upon hour of Melee battles. I bought one of the SC1+2 CD compendium copies a year or two later.

This game had a significant impact on my life. I was one of the original (and probably still the longest serving) users on the EFnet #starcontrol IRC channel. I met my first long term girlfriend through there, we spent a few years together. I moved overseas because of the girl I met, discussing the game I loved. I travelled the world and grew a love for that, before eventually heading home and meeting my now wife. However, every decision, my career, love of travel, significant life experiences; so much of it can be traced back to me playing Star Control II when I was (just) a teenager.

30 years though. That must mean I’m getting old!

forthegoats, Reddit User

Back in 2005 there was a cult following for the Nokia 770 Internet Tablet. It ran on it’s own flavour of Linux. So, naturally, I asked someone to port UQM to it. And they did (easily if I recall).

I’ll never forget playing UQM on the bus.

hedgecore, Reddit User

Author’s Note: I also was a member of the Nokia tablet cult and vaguely recall showing UQM running on my N800 to the TFB crew. That thing ruled!

I don’t know how unique my story is, but I played the hell out of Star Control on my Sega Genesis from my tween years until I went off to college. Still have the cartridge and game box.

Didn’t discover UQM until I was in college and had access to unlimited broadband and file-sharing sites. (Sorry.)

It’s the game that changed the way I thought about games. From a narrative that began by discovering the war I spent my childhood winning had been lost to learning that the Ur-Quan I had been killing by the hundreds had a twisted, but not illogical, rationale for their actions, it changed the way I viewed what storytelling in games could be.

markparisi, Reddit User

You know what the amazing thing is? I was a teenager in the 90s when I first played UQM (well, Star Control 2 then). I was always a scifi nerd and had cut my teeth on Space Quest (who still loves a good Sierra adventure?) and StarFlight 2 (closest thing to Traveller we’re ever going to get, honestly). So I’m at the mall at the local Electronic Boutique (anyone remember those?) when I see this box on the shelf. “Star Control 2, huh? I don’t even remember there being a Star Control 1. Hmm. Well, didn’t stop me from buying StarFlight 2, so…” I get home and start playing and I’m hooked instantly. And then I found the lander bug. Oh god. How embarrassing. The amazing part, though, is that the lander bug didn’t ruin the game. I mean, OK, I can give myself infinite money to buy up ship modules and escort ships… but I still have to go solve the puzzles and beat the bad guys.

Now for the even more amazing part… here we are 30 years later and I still take that game out probably once a year to do a playthrough because it’s still fun. Unlike other games where you beat it once and you’re pretty much done with it, I can keep coming back to UQM year after year for more enjoyment.

Here’s to another 30 years of UQM (and to UQM2).

mct1, Reddit User

Loved playing and found out about the game on a demo Cd for 3DO.

Loved the story and clearly recall telling off the arilou on one go and regretting not having hyperspace jumps.

I replayed it back in 2003 or 2004 on the pc port and it was still just as good.

Really looking forward to the next iteration.

m1stercakes, Reddit User

I was 12 when SC2 was released which my older brother had purchased and forbidden both me and my younger brother from playing the game. He did this by keeping the galactic map hidden in his room which you needed to answer the copy protection to boot up the game.

So what I did was wait for him to leave the house, and then snuck in his room with my younger brother to find the map and make a hand drawn copy. I think it took 2 or 3 break-ins to finish it because we did not rush and wanted to make sure it was as accurate as possible.

So throughout our entire youth we used our hand drawn map to play the game. Overall it worked pretty well but I know a couple stars were slightly off since I remember failing the copy protection a couple times.

It also survived me taking it to college and moving out of state for my first full time job. I believe the map is still in a box of stuff in my basement since I could never bear to throw away a relic like that and when I return home in a week or so I can try to find it to post a photo.

pravis, Reddit User

I remember playing this many, many moons ago with the coveted sound card duo, Sound Blaster AND Gravis Ultrasound. SC2 was one of the first games to support the GUS and the music was amazing. The gameplay was intuitive. The storyline was compelling. Everything a game should be.

I still fire up UQM once in a while and it’s just as fun as it ever was. Kudos to Paul and Fred and team for making a true classic. Next time I see a Druuge ship I will happily trade a few crew for some vichyssoise, and a few more for Wimbli’s Serving Ladle to distribute it in your honor. Just don’t let the crew know…

Prawnsinaspix, Reddit User

We received a few notes by way of email too!

Sending in the Umgah vs Sa-Matra fight because it is a crowd pleaser.

Personally, of the 25 ships, I think that Shofixti, Druuge, and Shofixti were the most interesting to do, but this is the one that exceeds expectations the most because most SC2 players I know don’t like the Umgah ship that much (SC1 players give it more respect). 

Edward Oakley, Sa-Matra Battle Fanatic

One member of the community even asked to write about the precursor (haw haw) to UQM as part of the game’s legacy:

Around 1994 when I was about 7, a friend of mine introduced me to the DOS game “StarCon”, as he called it. I was captivated by the variety of ships and he gave it to me on copied floppy disks. (Yes yes, I know – I have bought it legitimately twice since!). With the internet still not much more than a marginal novelty at the time, I did not find out SC2 existed for a few more years.

Star Control 1 is not a masterpiece like SC2/Ur-quan Masters is, but it is still an interesting and unique game. It introduced the Spacewar-style combat with more than half of SC2’s ships. Instead of customizable teams, you have Alliance vs. Hierarchy outside of Practice mode. However, the main part that SC2 does not fully supersede is the “Full Game”, a combination of turn-based strategy with action combat. The turn-based structure is simple but still has a good amount of options and mechanics. You have basic resource management, three different types of buildable installations, and can find Precursor upgrades for your ships through exploration. Of course when enemy ships meet at the same system, they will fight it out Melee-style. A few ships also have strategic abilities, such as the Mycon regenerating without colonies.

All four Xs of the 4X genre are there in some form, and there is even a rudimentary scenario editor (the game comes with nine – the Genesis version adds six more but no editor). Though actually, with its clean straightforward mechanics and three-actions-per-turn system, SC1’s strategy mode feels closer to a modern board game than a PC 4X game in some ways.  I didn’t fully understand the mechanics of the full game until I got a manual with a legit copy bundled with SC2 a few years later, but I was still fascinated by it and enjoyed messing around in it.

The story, while a small background element of SC1, still manages to produce the feeling of a universe with depth. It has a classic old-school manual of the sort that doesn’t really get written anymore, with the Hierarchy/Alliance race descriptions amusingly written as intelligence reports from the opposite side. Add the in-game scenario intros, pilot animations and captain names, and the ship specs, and there is some pretty good worldbuilding for a game where story isn’t very important. SC2 would go much further with this foundation of course, and having the Ur-quan win the SC1 war in SC2 was a great way to follow it up.

SC1’s combination of turn-based strategy and arcade action is still pretty unusual today – not many games use it, and a large portion of those that do involved Paul Reiche in some capacity! There have been attempts to revive it as a UQM mod or standalone game, but none have ever gotten very far (I very briefly tried once when UQM was new before realizing I was way out of my depth as a programmer). It’s an interesting part of Star Control that is often forgotten, and hopefully some day SC1’s Full Game mode can come back in one form or another.

Joel, North Carolina
The Spathi High Council from The Ur-Quan Masters

Thank you.
Thank you for creating an imaginative, funny, good looking, and fun to play game in Star Control 2.
Thank you for putting your livelihoods on the line and finishing it to your satisfaction.
Thank you for pivoting later on with your new hires and bringing it to the 3DO, which brought it to many new fans.
Thank you for taking a risk and investing in it again, to create Ur-Quan Masters for the community.
Thank you for stepping away from the studio you built to give the Ur-Quan Masters universe another adventure.
Thank you for posting, streaming, sharing your tools, and spreading your philosophy of finding the fun, and otherwise letting us behind the curtain as you create Ur-Quan Masters 2.

My first Star Control 2 was the CD-ROM compilation, and I loved it from the get-go, immersing myself in the single player adventure mode.  I’m not sure how I made it through all the battles, since I wasn’t good at Super Melee, but I loved gathering resources, building and flying around in my overpowered flagship.  I loved filling in my picture of the universe by talking to all the different aliens, and getting a sense for the gaps where the mysteries were.  And I loved that there were still mysteries at the end, giving us the ability to paint into them ourselves.

In college, I hosted the Unofficial Star Control (2) Page, taking over from Matthew Green in 1996 and passing it to Alex Weekley in 1998.ย  (This exists again nowadays on the star-control.com fan site.)ย  I remember that Fred and Paul actually emailed me about it — that email later got lost in a HD crash, and that’s the only file I still miss.ย  I also discovered, by happenstance, the October/November 1994 issue of Computer Artist magazine where Gene Bodio from PCA Graphics published renders of the art he created for the 3DO version.ย  I’ve always wanted 3D models of Star Control 2 things, and I did recreate the Space Station in an early version of 3D LightWave.ย  One of these days, I’d like to 3D print my own SC2 swag.

mazrim-taim / Todd Pederzani

Have your own story to share too? Let us know or add to the Reddit thread!

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Reflections on The Ur-Quan Masters from Greg Kasavin, Creative Director of Supergiant Games

Banner from Transistor, ยฉ Supergiant Games

As part of our 30 year celebration, we were honored to hear from Greg Kasavin โ€” creative director of Supergiant Games and author of one of our favorite articles about UQM โ€” who graciously shared some thoughts on the game and its impact on him after these 30 years.


Happy 30th anniversary to one-of-the-greatest-games-of-all-time-if-you-ask-me, Star Control II! I’ve been an avid game player ever since, and can still safely say that, all this time later, I’ve still never played anything quite like it.

StarCon II‘s unique blend of action, exploration, and role-playing, and its spectacular science-fiction world filled with weird, wonderful, sometimes-scary, sometimes-funny alien species created an unforgettable and incredibly inspiring experience for me. And, unlike many other great games from that early-’90s DOS era, it still holds up really well, thanks in no small part to the efforts of the team behind The Ur-Quan Masters project, who have ensured this classic game can still be played and enjoyed.

Title Screen from The Ur-Quan Masters

I grew up wanting to become a game developer, playing everything I could get my hands on. But StarCon II stood out as one of a special few games that truly sparked my imagination and made me think “I wish I could someday work on something that could make others feel the way this made me feel.” I’ve now worked on close to 10 different games, many of them quite different from each other, though let me tell you… StarCon II remains a constant source of inspiration, both spiritually when it comes to finding a distinctive tone, and often practically as a design reference, too. Whenever I’ve been in design brainstorms and we’re thinking about interesting, imaginative player abilities, I always think of StarCon II.

“Loser! Idiot! Jerk!”

When I was reflecting on this anniversary recently, I decided to fire up Star Control II: The Ur-Quan Masters for old time’s sake, start the campaign for the umpteenth time, play some of the awesome Super Melee combat mode. I still vividly recall many things about the game, such as how the Pkunk Fury starship has a chance to resurrect itself amid a glorious/hilarious Hallelujah!, and oh, the music…. But some details came back to me, such as how that same Pkunk ship regenerates its energy by ceaselessly insulting the opponent (“Loser! Idiot! Jerk!”). I laugh at almost nothing these days but busted out laughing at that, just as I must have when I was a kid, as the joy and imagination of this game came rushing back all in that one little aspect.

It’s difficult to single out the best part of StarCon II, which is part of why it’s so good. But for me it’s that great big personality that ultimately shines through. Of course its personality wouldn’t have meant as much if StarCon II wasn’t a blast to play. But the vibrant tone, the confident balance between absurd humor and serious high-stakes space opera, all of that helped open my eyes to what games could be.

The Ur-Quan Masters project is testament to the fact that this is a deeply loved game, and I hope many people out there will be playing and enjoying it not just another 30 years from now, but far into the future. If nothing else, it’ll give everybody something to do once the Ur-Quan arrive in the middle of the next century and cover our planet in their slave-shield and all that…!


Headshot of Greg Kasavin, creative director at Supergiant Games.
Greg Kasavin, Supergiant Games

Greg Kasavin is creative director at Supergiant Games, the small independent studio behind Hades, Pyre, Transistor, and Bastion. He has done the writing and contributed to the design of each game.

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Pistol Shrimp Podcast โ€“ Episode 4 โ€“ George Barr 30 Year Special

For our 30th Anniversary Celebration, we have an additional, special episode of the Pistol Shrimp podcast with UQM illustrator George Barr available to listen to on Patreon. George was responsible for many of the iconic, physical illustrations which would then become digitized for use in UQM. Beyond UQM, George contributed artwork to science fiction and fantasy works from books, to magazines, to Dungeons and Dragons rule books.

This interview was originally conducted when Paul and Fred visited George’s residence to acquire some of his original works. George talks about his beginnings in art, what it was like to be in Los Angeles on the set of Star Trek, and his techniques for working with physical mediums. It contains several sections where George, Paul, and Fred are rifling through sheafs of artwork which, unfortunately, are not able to be appreciated entirely in an audio recording. A transcript is also available below.

However, this interview is also special for another reason. In Paul’s own words:

“George Barr was instrumental in creating the fantasy world and adventure of The Ur-Quan Masters. We very much want him involved in this new game. Unfortunately, he’s suffered vision loss and is unable to create new artwork. We decided to come up with a different plan. We went through some of his original artwork that he was able to sell and license, and by god we are going to find a way to use it because George is awesome.”

Paul Reiche on George Barr, November 2022

Some of this artwork was, indeed, created for other purposes without UQM2 in mind. We wanted George to be a part of UQM2 just as much as we wanted him to be a part of UQM, and we’re excited to show you some of his involvement. Spoiler Alert: These images are going to be part of UQM2. Also Spoiler Alert: We may or may not have no idea how or why just yet. Maybe you can tell us!

We hope you enjoy this conversation with a key member of the original UQM team and a first look at some of the new pieces that have been created for UQM2 (even if no one knew it at the time).

Last but not least, some of the original UQM pieces seen here are being provided for the first time in the form of high-resolution scans. They contain many pixels and can be downloaded in a very large zip file here.

UQM Original Paintings

UQM2 Works

Transcript

Pistol Shrimp Podcast โ€“ Episode 4 โ€“ George Barr 30 Year Special Read More ยป

Community Art Showcase – 30 Years of The Ur-Quan Masters

As part of our 30 Year Anniversary for The Ur-Quan Masters, we asked the community to share any fan art they had created with us. We received so many submissions through email, Reddit, Twitter, and Discord. With three decades under your belt, you had so many things to share with us, and some of our community members even created new things just to celebrate with us! We wanted to take some time to share as much as we could back with the world in a virtual museum gallery to highlight you, our amazing audience who have helped keep the game alive for all of this time.

We certainly didn’t capture everything out there, but we want to say again: “we wouldn’t be here without you!”. Thank you for sharing your love with everyone.

Digital and Physical Art

Professor Hazard writes “I maded this for you. Thank you for making my life better for 30 years.”
Zarla writes: “Hey there! I’ve been a fan of Starcon2 for ages, it’s one of my favorite games and was a big influence on me when I was a kid. The Starcontrolfans twitter account contacted me asking if I had anything to share for the anniversary, so I decided to do a big group shot of all the races together! With an ominous Kohr-Ah in the background of course, haha. I improvised some lower torsos for some of the races we didn’t get to see in the game itself, so there’s a bit of creative license, but I hope you like it!”
Chris Sandusky writes: “attached a photo of an acrylic painting I did back in June of the Zoq-Fot-Pik, which can also be found on my DeviantArt account at https://www.deviantart.com/theclockworkcoyote/art/Frungy-882556592
Simon Marcoux writes: “A long time ago, me and Tommi Salminen worked on a webcomic based on star control 2 story. While it didn’t last long, he ended up doing a full novel out of the story which is amazing. The website navigation for the two chapters is kinda broken, so you need to manually up the image number to cycle through the pages.” More panels starting with http://www.star-control.com/hosted/gl-comic/images/001.jpg
From Zach_the_Elder
Zach_The_Elder writes: “my employee had this made for me” (hopefully voted employee of the decade)

Tweets Galore

The Kohr-Ah will blanket the universe.
Not exactly fan art, but a legitimate piece of history!
Stop! Why do you bake this thing?!
The Friendly Doctrinal Get-Together
The Crimson Corporation doesn’t seem so bad.
But.. they’re so cute.

Videos and Music

So festive! Just in time for the holidays.
A modernization of the classic we all hear every time we jump into our ship. Martin Lettvin writes: “I wanted to forward this to you before the stream today. It’s an update of Riku’s Hyperspace theme that I made about eight years ago”
No, really. How long does Hayes think he can keep up this rave?
Hyperspace and Chill?
Proof you don’t want to face a Shofixti in tentacle-to-paw/hand combat.

Projects, Games, Mods

UQM Megamod

No lookback on The Ur-Quan Masters can be complete without mentioning Megamod. JHGuitarFreak (aka Kohr-Ah Death) maintains the mod for UQM which includes… well… everything imaginable! From balance changes, to optional content, to quality of life improvements and whole new features, it is the most awesome (in the awe-inspiring sense) kind of fanmail one can imagine.


Infinite Ur-Quan Masters

Burger Circus shares: Want to play Ur-Quan Masters with a randomly-generated map? Love the old game, but want to play something with INFINITE replayability? http://www.infiniteurquanmasters.com/ has you covered.


Starflight MZX

No_roo writes: Here’s a thing I made back when I was a  teenager,  ~ 1997 – 2008 that was heavily inspired by UQM & Starflight. It was built in an old text mode game engine called Megazeux, which was basically a more powerful ZZT.

It can be downloaded or played in browser here: https://www.digitalmzx.com/show.php?id=2374
Alternatively a video of someone poking around in it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFZW9Gc2RmA

That project had a lot of design problems and didn’t end up going anywhere, but it taught me a lot, and was largely responsible for me deciding to become a software engineer, and to work on indie games on the side. It’s pretty crusty, but I’ll always remember it fondly.


UQM Melee Rebuild

Zach_the_Elder, our resident tinkerer with the UQM2 tools, shared some recordings of his recreation and re-imaginings of Super Melee made in Unity.

Alien Apparel

Talen Lee wrote to let us know they’ve been making t-shirt designs based on UQM for the past few years. Represent your favorite (or least favorite – we won’t judge) species in style.

Got More?

If you are seeing this and want to submit more of your own creations (or are *frumple* Dan missed one of yours), please let us know!

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Reflections on UQM from Alex Mosolov, Creator of Starsector

Throughout the month, we have been thrilled to hear from people who were inspired by The Ur-Quan Masters. We had the good fortune of getting in touch with a fellow developer โ€” Alex Mosolov, creator of space adventure game Starsector โ€” who joins us to generously share his reflections on UQM after these 30 years.

Originally written on November 20th, 2022. Cover image from https://fractalsoftworks.com/2013/02/05/painting-the-hound-and-the-hangar/.


When Dan reached out a couple of weeks ago to see if I might want to say a few words about The Ur-Quan Masters and what it meant to me, it felt a little surreal. If I had to name a game that’s had the most influence on me creatively, and on shaping what I want out of games, then UQM would be it. Being asked to talk about it now feels like coming full circle.

My first real introduction to video games was at my mom’s work, in the very late 80s and early 90s. I was around 10 years old at the time, and this was the only place I had access to a PC (an Intel 286, I believe? the memory is a bit hazy; but: definitely 5 inch floppy disks as the medium of choice), and I’d be lucky to get a couple of hours, a couple of times a year. The original Star Control was one of the games I played a lot, then (the original Warlords was another favorite). A lot of the time between those all-too-infrequent visits was spent thinking about games, playing them in my head, and drawing in my notebooks.

Fortunately (and, perhaps, embarrassingly), my grandparents saved those notebooks, and now I get to share a couple of these drawings with you!

Here, it looks like I’m conceptualizing different ship ideas. Yes, the one in the top left is clearly a hand-cranked meat grinder. No, I don’t remember what I was thinking.

That one aside, we have some kind of charged bolo behind what I can only assume is an Ur-Quan prototype, a ship that’s clearly spawning two limpet mines (because one just isn’t annoying enough), and some kind of Mycon-Androsynth hybrid blowing what I seem to recall was supposed to be a bubble of plasma. And a few others, also with inspiration clearly taken from the original SC ships.

Looking at that picture, I think the frame of mind I was in was “coming up with other ship ideas that would work within the game”. Modding it in my imagination, if you will! And then playing it, in the same place, since: no regular access to a PC!

This one (on the left side, obviously) is from a bit later – months? A year? What strikes me about this one is how close this is to Starsector as it is now – a top down view, a ship with turreted weapons, missiles visibly mounted on the hull. What looks suspiciously like a Reaper-class torpedo, coming in hot. As I very vaguely remember, this was an evolution from the Star Control designs, a “wouldn’t it be neat ifโ€ฆ” sort of thing. What’s funny is, by the time I’d started work on Starsector, I had forgotten all about these, but it was all apparently lurking in the back of my mind. The one on the right is a Lasher-class frigate, from Starsector. It’s almost the same ship!

Later, when we had a PC at home, I got my hands on The Ur-Quan Masters – I have vague memories of convincing my mom to buy it at a store, some kind of Best Buy equivalent. I wish I remembered more about playing it in those days, but mostly what I’m left with is feelings. How it felt to realize that every single star on the map was somewhere I could go. How it felt to be able to actually land on a planet and fly the lander around. How it felt to gather resources, to plan an expedition, to try to make it come out with enough profit in the end to keep going. How it felt – during what I thought was a routine resource-gathering landing – to find an energy signature and something incredibly important to the story, just, randomly! How it felt to realize that the world isn’t static, when the Kohr-Ah showed up. How it felt to discover quasi-space, and that it was only accessible from hyperspace during a certain time, and that it had been there all along!

A lot of the story stuck with me, too. I think there’s a quality to it where it doesn’t explain too much – just sets up these evocative situations, and lets your imagination fill in the gaps. The Androsynth and the Orz, cosmic horrors from “outside”, that are also very helpful, non-threatening, and can become your allies. Finding out that the Ur-Quan – the bad guys! – are sympathetic (or at least understandable), at least from a certain angle. The absolute hellhole that is Druuge space. What little is hinted at about the Ilwrath; imagining what life on their planets might be like. The horror of a Mycon Deep Child destroying the Syreen home world. It’s so good, I think, in large part because it lets your imagination tell much of the story.

In the end, the way the game has made me feel – both through its story and its mechanics – is what’s had the most influence on me creatively. Trying to recreate a game from your childhood is a fool’s errand; the same things won’t make you feel the way they did 10, 20, 30 years ago. But you can try to aim to make a different game that gives you those kinds of feelings, and that’s been my goal with Starsector. In many – most! – cases it’s vague and you wouldn’t really see a connection with UQM unless you knew it was there, and it’s more of an overall influence rather than something that maps more closely, in any case.

In other cases, it’s more overt – for example (spoiler alert!), there’s a hidden pocket of space in Starsector called “Alpha Site”; it’s accessible from hyperspace from the start of the game and has some interesting (and dangerous) things in it, and the player is only pointed to it some ways along the main story line. That feeling of “oh, I could’ve gone there any time I wanted to, had I known it was there” is very much a direct attempt to recreate the feeling of finding out about quasi-space in UQM.

And, of course, if you ever see the planetary shield in Starsector, you’ll know what it’s about. That one is not an attempt to recreate any sort of particular feeling, it’s just an out-and-out homage.

There have been many other inspirations and influences along the way, of course – and hopefully an original idea or two somewhere in there! But looking back now, it’s clear that 30 years ago, The Ur-Quan Masters is the game that set me on the path to making Starsector.


Do you want to play a space game full of exploration and adventure from a glorious top-down view (with an extremely active modding community)? Go check out Starsector, available for purchase and still under development from Fractal Softworks. (And Dan strongly recommends SsethTzeentach’s glowing review for the uninitiated.)

Reflections on UQM from Alex Mosolov, Creator of Starsector Read More ยป

Pistol Shrimp Podcast – Episode 3 – Erol Otus 30 Year Special

For our 30th Anniversary Celebration, we have a special episode of the Pistol Shrimp podcast with none other than Erol Otus, now available on Patreon. Erol was responsible for several creative parts of The Ur-Quan Masters โ€“ art, sound, writing, and voice โ€“ but was primarily responsible for creating physical and digital paintings of the various aliens’ communications screens. Beyond UQM, Erol has contributed art, design, and boundless creativity to products and games ranging from Dungeons and Dragons to Skylanders.

Originally recorded for the 25th anniversary, Paul sits down with Erol to discuss what it was like to work on art in the time of UQM, D&D, their experiences with games in Berkeley, California, and even limericks. A transcript is also available below.

Erol has generously provided some of his artwork from outside of UQM to share, as well.

Keak

Cover for Goodman Game’s Dying Earth role playing game. Part of the core rule books, this one is sort of their monster manual. It depicts a Keak, mesmerizing and ingesting.

Taloonan

The cover for a module Erol created based on a D&D campaign he was running. It wasn’t full on published, a limited release was created by the North Texas RPG convention. It shows the Demigod Taloonan swimming along below the Shanga, a vessel crewed by the adventurers.

Dwellers of the Forbidden City

An AD&D module cover, “Dwellers of the Forbidden City”

Transcript

Pistol Shrimp Podcast – Episode 3 – Erol Otus 30 Year Special Read More ยป