Game Sprites Sheets
Arcade games are stand-alone, coin-operated video games. They are distributed by many companies and run on many different hardware platforms, but the first. Character Generator. Create a character sprite sheet for your game using 100% open art. Based on Universal LPC Sprite Sheet All art is dual licensed: GPL3 and CC-BY-SA3.
The latest art challenge started Monday, October 16th. Submissions were due October 29th. Congratulations, Joth! Be sure to tag your submissions properly! Challenge, Spooky In honor of Halloween coming up, the challenge is something that evokes long shadows, zombie apocalypses, film noir and mystery-solving talking dogs all at once. Think up something to scare and share. Mysterious art, creepy music, altogether ooky textures.
Whatever's tossin' your coffin. Spirit knockin', ectoplasm, phantasms, rattlin' chains, chatterin' jaw bones, covergirl monsters, clever ghouls, Will o' the Wisp, Bloody Mary and The Creature from that Blucky Lagoon. Trick or treat! Direct questions or comments to Dannorder's art challenge post. 2017 OGA Summer Game Jam was a smashing success!
The Summer Game Jam is done, and ran from July 1st and ended on July 28th! Four weeks of development, two weeks of judging playing each other's games. Make anything you want, but it must use at least six OGA assets (two from three categories) and made in the four weeks provided. Participants needed to sign up on the to officially participate; any questions and messages of congratulations should be directed to the It was a lot of fun. The entries are still available, so go check them out and have fun! Congratulations to Red Voxel for the 1st place submission! Congratulations to all the participants for making such a great game jam come together!
Itch.io event: OGA Forum Thread: Banner art made by, using Tatermand's (CC-by-SA 3.0). The is working better than ever!
I have been able to clean or correct about 900 tags across thousands of submissions. I wasn't even aware of some really great assets before now since the tags were preventing them from showing up in my tag searches. We're still looking at a few tweaks to make it work even better, but this should make for some quick improvements in the meantime. Based on some frequently asked tag questions lately, Kurt asked me to post a quick DOs & DON'Ts guide on how to get the most out of the tags system. Great idea, Kurt! This guide applies to both art submitters and people searching for art. This guide only applies to tags; not title, description, or other search fields.:) The goal of tags is finding what you're looking for.
Think of as many single-word ways of describing what you're submitting/seeking. Although there are situations where multi-word tags are needed, the overwhelming majority of tags are single-word descriptors. Try to enter several single-word tags instead of fewer multi-word tags.
' dark, fantasy, rpg, rigged, static, mesh, lowpoly ' is more effective than ' rigged lowpoly mesh assets, static 3d meshes, dark fantasy rpg art'. DONT:. #hashtag - OGA tags are not linked to twitter. Please don't use hashtags when submitting or searching by tag. They just make the artwork harder to find since '#sword' will not show up in a search for 'sword'. Cross stitch pattern software uk.
They also break alphabetical sorting since #ZXY comes before ABC. Omit commas between tags - If you don't put a comma between your tags, people searching will find nothing, and people submitting will never be found.
' do not forget commas between tags' is all one tag that has to be matched exaclty :( ' do not, forget, commas, between, tags' is 5 different tags that can be searched or matched individually.:). ennemy, midevil, enviroment, sord - Be sure the tags are spelled correctly for best results. (I always misspell 'medieval').
Over 20 different styles!, Mega-Awesome Studio Pack v1.14881b, Haha!:), boring artwork I made, I need artword that doesn't suck - Who would submit/search for these phrases? Probably shouldn't:. free, open source, video game, art, asset - Everything on OGA is a free video game art asset. These words won't help narrow the search. cc0, cc-by, gpl, Creative Commons, Public Domain - Tagging the license is unneccessary. There is a separate field dedicated to searching by specific licenses. texture, 3d art, 2d asset, music, sound effect - Tagging the art category is unneccessary.
There is a separate field dedicated to searching by specific art category. Don't put 'string music, dark 2d art'. Just put 'string, dark'. sword s, rock s, icon s, cact i - Plural tags will not show up in a search for the singular version. Searching for 'sword' will not show any artwork tagged 'swords' and vice versa.
When in doubt, just use the singular tag ( sword, rock, icon, cactus) Even if the asset contains more than one icon, many swords, a big pile of rocks, and a whole forest of cacti. The singular form of any tag is far more commonly used. You could include both forms, I guess, but it will keep things a lot simpler if you try to stick to a singular convention. The exception to this is when the singular form has an entirely different meaning than the plural. Pants =/= multiple pant, glasses =/= multiple glass. Makes no difference:.
Case SEnsiTive - UPPER-CASE, lower-case, makes no difference. When in doubt, though, put everything in lower-case.
artist/submitter name in the tags - Adding your name or your project name as a tag is unlikely to help anyone find the asset and has zero SEO impact. There is a separate field dedicated to searching by the artist's/submitter's name. DO:. orchestral, chiptune, trance, portrait, synth, pixelart, chibi, anime, painterly - tags that indicate the style of art are useful. 32x32, 8-bit, 16-bit, dawnbringer, db32, 128x64, 44.1 kHz, 110bpm, specular, bumpmap - give common technical specifications of the asset, if any apply. Being able to search by dimension, palette, sample rate, et cetera is helpful.
DS / Dsi
3/4 perspective, overhead, ortho, 1st person, isometric, oblique, sidescroller - include the art's perspective, if applicable. Different games have different viewpoints.
Being able to find the right kind is invaluable. sword, dog, face, warrior, robot, grass, rock, sad, spooky, upbeat, relaxing, western, fantasy, scifi - a few one-word descriptions of what is in the asset will go a long way.
Video Game Sprites Sheets
gui, ui, animation, animated, sci-fi, scifi - Try several versions of tags with very similar meanings. Sometimes people try one and don't think of the other. This will allow the search to work either way.
No need to go overboard, though. 'gui, ui, graphical user interface, user interface, graphical ui, u interface, user i, gu interface' is just getting ridiculous. Just a couple of the most commonly used tags is enough. Not sure which are most used?
Search for the ones you're thinking of and see which one returns more results.png,.blend,.obj,.wav, unity3d,.svg,.flac,.xcf - tagging the file format is often useful for people working with specific software suites or working with specific programming constraints. For the sake of conformity and ease-of-searching, please always include the dot before file extensions. Otherwise people searching for Photoshop '.psd' files will never find the asset tagged 'psd'. Edit your submission - Don't be afraid to click that 'Edit' tab at the top of your submission.
PC / Computer
If you misspelled something or forgot the commas (I always do), no need to delete the submission, just click edit, fix whatever doesn't look right, and click save. TL;DR: A good rule of thumb I use to test if a tag of mine is good or not: If I search for any single tag I've used, but my submissions- no one elses- are the only results. It's likely no one will ever find my submission using that tag. I should probably change or remove the tag from my submission. If I'm the only person that thought of this tag, I'm the only person that will ever find my art.
Hey folks, Just wanted to let everyone know that we've got search indexing working again. Near as I can tell, it looks like the problem was due to a couple of corrupt nodes (out of about 60,000) causing the search index function to throw an exception, and then stop dead. I've patched the Drupal instance it so if it ever runs into this issue again, it'll log a warning and keep indexing. At any rate, the short version is that everything should be indexed now, so search should be useful again. We'll keep an eye on it and make sure it continues to work properly.