Saturday, November 17, 2012

SpecTrek (Android Game)

As I was randomly browsing the web recently, I came across a really cool little augmented reality game called SpecTrek, developed for Android by Games4All.  SpecTrek is a ghost hunting game where the player must explore his/her real-world environment to find and capture virtual ghosts who are haunting the area.  This description sounded fun and interesting, so I downloaded the free, "lite" version onto my Samsung Infuse.  Today, fortune conspired to give me the time to play, a very promising place to play, and someone with whom to play.

The game uses many of the phone's features to impressive effect.  It uses the GPS to build the gameplay area in the player's actual, physical environment as well as to locate the player in the playing field.  It uses the compass to know which direction the player is facing, as well as provide an on-screen compass to aid in navigating the play area.  It uses the camera to provide an augmented reality view of the environment.  It uses the accelerometer to switch between the map mode (when the phone is held flat) and the ghost capture mode (when the phone is held upright).

When one begins a game in SpecTrek, the app gets a GPS fix to determine the player's location, which then becomes the center of the real-world play area.  A short game has a fifteen-minute time limit in which the player must find and catch all of the ghosts that spawned in the play area -- a circle with about a 410-foot radius.  In the few times that I played, the number of ghosts ranged from three to five.

I played the first game of the day by myself.  First I held the phone flat to get a look at the map.  It showed where the ghosts might be, so I immediately headed off toward the nearest one.  The first one was on private property, and it was outside of my capture range, so I had to write that one off.  The next nearest one was just south of my current position, but when I approached it, I got too close without capturing it and it ran away.  By this point, I only had about four minutes remaining and I hadn't captured one single ghost yet.  So I ran to the far opposite side of the play area where there were three ghosts hanging around.  I wasted a whole minute trying to catch the first one who always managed to evade my sights.  Two more were due north of me, so I ran that way and found them both hanging out together between a fence and a shed.  I captured them both, back to back.  Only 40 seconds remained in the game now, so I ran back to the one I had failed to capture just seconds before...and I caught it without a problem.  Time expired six seconds later and I had managed to catch three out of five ghosts, all within the last three minutes of the game.  What a thrill!

I enjoyed the game so much, I purchased the full version.  It's well worth the $2.49 price tag, no doubt.

Then my brother-in-law Kevin joined me and we sought out a good place to begin the game.  We estimated that the best place to start would be the place that would give us access to as much of the play area as possible, hoping to avoid the problem I faced with the unreachable ghost in the private property.  Even on the smallest setting, the play area was so large that it extended into areas we could not reach no matter where we centered it, so we just did the best we could to be strategic about it.  We played three games before the battery died on my phone, two of which we were able to win by catching all of the ghosts within the time limit.  I gained enough experience to level up after the second game, so I spent my skill points on increasing the capture range so that I could capture ghosts who were farther away in areas that I couldn't enter.  We played one final game to take advantage of this upgrade, and it worked very well.

The only problem I discovered with the game was a glitch with the map.  It would occasionally lose track of where we were and try to say that we had suddenly teleported a few hundred feet northeast.  I found a workaround that seemed to fix it each time it would happen though:  Go back to the info/summary screen, wait a few seconds, and then press Continue to go back into the game.  That seems to resync it correctly.

Ah, what a fun game!  It's disappointing that the winter months are coming and will make it difficult to play this game since it requires a lot of time outside.  I'll just eagerly await the return of spring and use this game as a great excuse to get out of the house and get some exercise from time to time.

TL;DR:  SpecTrek is a very fun augmented reality game that is well worth its low price.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Return of the...Me

I have decided that it's time to start blogging again. I must get over the profound sense of loss arising from my inexcusable failure to save my old Yahoo blog. I need to get past the sickening, gut-wrenching regret that I didn't act in time. I need to stop beating myself up over my easily avoidable lack of wisdom in choosing not to back it up.
Why am I so upset over losing a stupid blog? Mostly because of what it represented. It was not only a collection of my thoughts. It was also a detailed diary of the first few years with my wife. It recorded events with my beloved pets. It provided a creative outlet for lyrics and poetry. It was a place to jot down notes on my plans and projects. It was so many things that are now gone forever. I feel physically ill every time I think of it, especially since it could easily have been avoided if I hadn't been so overconfident in my ability to transfer it manually before the deadline.
But life goes on, and so does my need to continue all of those things I mentioned above.  Every time I think about blogging again, I remember how much I've lost and it stops me in my tracks. It's debilitating, but it's time to stop mourning and move on. I still have ideas to share and things to express, and that'll never happen as long as I let the failures of the past hold me back.

So consider this my formal declaration that I am returning to the world of blogging. This blog will become what my old one was: a place to spew forth whatever random thoughts dominate my mind at any particular point in time, and encourage me to organize them into some sort of semi-coherent order.
There's still no guarantee of frequency, but it is time to start moving forward again. If you're reading this, you are invited to join me on this journey at your leisure.
I shall return!