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Download: More Spore prototypes to play with



The Spore Community Site has been busy with brand new prototypes for fans to play with. Prototypes are tools the developers use to help test theories and explore design directions. The public normally never gets to see these prototypes, but the Spore developers decided to pass them out for fans to try out and toy around with. We have all the prototypes available for Spore fans to try out. Remember that EA does not support these prototypes, they've never been tested, and many aren't easily explained. All prototypes are less than 1 MB.

Click "Continue" to read the descriptions of each prototype.

Download the Spore GonzagoGL Prototype
Download the Spore Waterboy Prototype
Download the Spore NetCity Prototype
Download the Spore Gaslight Prototype
Download the Spore Crowd Prototype
Download the Spore SPUG Prototype
Download the Spore Space Prototype
Download the Spore Cell Culture Prototype
Download the Spore City Maze Prototype
Download the Spore BIOME Prototype
Download the Spore ParticleMan Prototype


All prototype descriptions are copied from the Spore Community Site.

GonzagoGL

"GonzagoGL is an OpenGL-based prototype of the Spore Creature game. Similar to SPUG, it places the player in an environment with predators, prey, shelter and vegetation. GonzagoGL advances the SPUG model to include higher quality terrain and a greater emphasis on gameplay. GonzagoGL was the final gameplay prototype developed for Spore."

Waterboy

"WaterBoy is a fluid dynamics simulator designed to explore the behavior of large bodies of water on uneven terrain. Developed in 2002, WaterBoy also demonstrates early application of modern graphics technology, including environment cube mapping and custom shaders."

NetCity

"NetCity is a programmable simulator used to explore the evolution of complex behavior from simple components. User-defined nodes can be set to emit signals and move, or shrink and grow in when a signal is received. NetCity was inspired by the Soda Constructor (sodaplay.com) and by the book Vehicles: Experiments in Synthetic Psychology by Valentino Braitenberg."

Gaslight

"Gaslight simulates a process called stochastic, self-propagating star formation (SSPSF.) Interstellar gas and dust begin to collapse under the force of its own gravity. This gives rise to regions of dense material that eventually give rise to stars. When the stars ignite, they heat up the surrounding material, which moves away from the stars, creating more regions of increased density, which give rise to more stars, which moves more material, which creates more stars and so on."

Crowd

"Crowd is a SimCity 4 prototype developed by the Spore prototyping team. The player controls a neighborhood of city blocks. Sims wander the city looking for residential, commercial or industrial buildings where they can work, rest or recreate. The player may zone the unzoned (gray) city blocks to attract sims of a given type. Zoned buildings also emit traffic vehicles, which can be controlled with traffic lights."

SPUG

"SPUG is a tunable gameplay prototype for the Creature level of Spore. The player controls an avatar creature on a simple planetary terrain where they may hunt prey, evade predators, eat, rest and level up their stats. No limitations are placed on leveling up or cheating stats. This tool was intended to give designers the opportunity to explore different economies for the creature game, so limitations on power ups and level ups are self-imposed."

Space

"'Space' is a gameplay prototype of the Space level of Spore. The player explores a galaxy of stars with a spacecraft, discovering new worlds to terraform and colonize and encountering alien species to fight or befriend. Successful colonies provide the player with resources and income which they can invest in technological research. Advanced technologies allow the player to terraform, colonize fight and explore more effectively."

Cell Culture

"Cell Culture is a SimCity-like simulation of the spread of life and culture across a planetary surface. The planet is represented as a grid of cells. Each cell has several variables describing the amount and kind of life present at that location. Life grows and spreads from cell to cell based on these variables. The more favorable the conditions, the faster the rate of growth and spread."

City Maze

"City Maze is an agent-based city simulation prototype. The player controls a city of sim creatures. Players may place residential, industrial, entertainment and defense buildings. When sims enter these buildings, they rest, produce income, improve their mood or defend against raider attacks. Happy, safe, rested sims will multiply and produce income. Miserable, threatened, tired sims will get fed up and leave the city."

BIOME

"BIOME is a programmable cellular automata simulator that allows users to develop simple "SimCity-like" grid simulations. The grid-simulations in SimCity were inspired by Conway's "Life" program, which produces amazingly intricate patterns from simple rules

BIOME uses a language based on chemical stoichiometry, the notation system used to describe chemical reactions. Cells in a BIOME simulation change state the same way that chemicals change when exposed to other chemicals. Systems such as this can be used to simulate phenomena such as forest fires, disease epidemics, animal migration patterns and crystallization

BIOME supports both rectangular and spiral cellular automata configurations. The spiral configuration was used to study stochastic, self-propagating star formation (the process whereby the ignition of a star promotes the creation of more stars) on the galactic scale."

ParticleMan

"ParticleMan simulates gravitational attraction between particles in a cloud. This system was used to study such gravitational dynamics as orbits, nebula formation, star formation and particle streams from sources like pulsars and black holes.

Turn 'particle-particle interactions' under physics off and on to see the difference between the more orderly and predictable independent particles and the chaotic interacting ones. With particle-particle interactions off, you can create some elaborate streams of particles using the Particle Gun and Gravity Well objects. Play with physics controls to create different kinds of gravitational simulations. High fusion rates can be used to simulate star birth in collapsing nebulae, for example and low fusion rates can be used to simulate interaction between stars in a galaxy."

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