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Forerunner City: Difference between revisions

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'''"The Lost City"''' was a concept for a gameplay space to be featured in ''[[Halo 3]]''. However, it was cut during development, as the space had grown so immense that ''"it could be a game in itself"''.<ref>[https://picasaweb.google.com/114253662089061571624/Halo3TheLostCity#5573889624080394914 '''Picasa''': ''Paul Russel > Halo 3: The Lost City 12/16'']</ref>
'''"The Lost City"''' was a concept for a gameplay space to be featured in ''[[Halo 3]]''. However, it was cut during development, as the space had grown so immense that ''"it could be a game in itself"''.<ref>[https://picasaweb.google.com/114253662089061571624/Halo3TheLostCity#5573889624080394914 '''Picasa''': ''Paul Russel > Halo 3: The Lost City 12/16'']</ref>


The final iteration's exterior appears to have influenced the design of the final game's [[Cartographer]]: the forward half of the city, especially its spire, is virtually identical to the map room structure. A building identical to the final concept was also featured in the ''[[Halo Legends]]'' episode ''[[Origins]]''.
The final iteration's exterior appears to have influenced the design of the final game's [[Cartographer]]: the forward half of the city, especially its spire, is virtually identical to the map room's exterior structure. A building identical to the final concept was also featured in the ''[[Halo Legends]]'' episode ''[[Origins]]''.


==Development and design==
==Development and design==

Revision as of 21:26, November 11, 2011

File:CartographerRough.jpg
An exterior view of the city's final iteration. This design was recycled for the Cartographer in Halo 3 and a structure in Origins.

"The Lost City" was a concept for a gameplay space to be featured in Halo 3. However, it was cut during development, as the space had grown so immense that "it could be a game in itself".[1]

The final iteration's exterior appears to have influenced the design of the final game's Cartographer: the forward half of the city, especially its spire, is virtually identical to the map room's exterior structure. A building identical to the final concept was also featured in the Halo Legends episode Origins.

Development and design

Built by Bungie Environmental Artist Paul Russel, the level was to be based around a massive Forerunner city. At first, Russel started exploring the idea by designing different types of skyscrapers based on Forerunner aesthetic,[2] gradually adding detail until discarding the idea of a conventional, human-like city in favor of a more solid and defined arcology design.[3]

Russel then built several architectural components, stacking them together to form a single, massive structure which he then flipped on top of itself.[4][5]

However, this design was also discarded and replaced by a single building covered in an ornate, extremely detailed cantilever pattern.[6] The final design incorporated a variation of the repetitive cantilever structure based around a massive arcology structure, featuring an expansive interior space with complex structural elements nestled within the superstructure.[7]

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Gallery

Sources