Bad Demo
The first presentation was to faculty and some industry representatives (fortunately their thing seemed to be anything but games.) It was originally going to be in a classroom setting but moved to the lounge in the student life center due to the number of people attending. The lounge, which happened to have one, maybe two, network ports. Both which were in use by other equipment... sigh. Without being able to play with someone all I could do was crash into scenery. Not much of a demo.
I was able to re-show the project in a lab, with a proper network, but the damage was done. My kingdom for Fraps... and the time (and people) to use it effectively. The fact I didn't have a fallback in case of network failure was a pretty major oversight on my part. Still that last minute venue change was really frustrating.
The most frustrating issue though was the fact the most vocal representative was most interested in how a project was supposed to make money. The fact he seemed more impressed about a group wearing suits than their actual project (which was quite slick) was particularly rankling. Why in the fuck are superficial details such as what the presenter is wearing even considered relevant? Caring more about clothing than the product demonstrated is not something to be proud of!
The impression he left me is that I could have run a pre-rendered video (not a recording of the game) and made up some bullshit about online gaming being worth billions and not been called on the fact I didn't even present a product. That would have saved a couple months of effort... At least the other members of the panel were willing to ask some technical questions during all the presentations.
Good Demo
The second demonstration was at the technology program showcase for the college. This was a 3 hour affair where a large number of people in the various technology programs at the school got to show off their projects. This time a lot more time was given to setup, last time there was a token effort in setting up a router which didn't work at all when used for wired networking. The project was set up on two PCs and running with proper Live accounts. There was some pain as some old bugs managed to magically un-fix themselves, and I didn't actually have the passwords for the Live accounts that were set up for the demo, but that got worked out early on.
The big lifesaver was having Heather (from Slime Cat Blog) and her sister to demo playing the game while I could talk about what it was and how it worked. They would fly around, shoot at each other, be silly, laugh and generally have fun. This attracted a lot of attention from the various people attending the showcase. It also nicely showed what the project was without me having to go into crazy amounts of detail describing how it worked. I'm glad they were there because a lot of the people coming to see the project weren't gamers.
By the way, if you're wondering how those photo****d textures turned out; here's a rendering of the three fighter types.
Not great but still decent for about 2-3 hours per ship I think.
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