āYou have to make games for someone you love,ā says William, ābecause that way you can imagine who youāre making it for.
āYou can imagine the smiles the game will bring to their face; you can imagine the good times that people you care about can have with your game.ā
William Ho, Design Director at United Front Games, is making LittleBigPlanet Karting for someone he loves.
Weāre in the Penthouse at the Andaz Hotel in Los Angeles. William Ho is in the midst of introducing LittleBigPlanet Karting to the press. He says he loves three things: the first is Kart Racers, second is LittleBigPlanet and⦠the third, conveniently, is the combination of those two things.
But thatās just rhetoric ā William Hoās first real love was cars.
āIāve always loved them,ā he laughs. āEven when I was a kid I loved cars.ā
And, of course, he loved video games. Video games about cars.
āI played every system when I was a kid, all the way back to the VIC 20,ā says William. āI played all of the classic racing games ā games like Spy Hunter, Jump and Bump ā all of those games are part of my DNA. I really love that age, and Iām inspired by that age ā when anyone could pick up and play a game, with no instructions at all, and enjoy it right away! Thereās something cool about that.ā
Itās easy, especially in the wake of Sonyās PlayStation All-Stars announcement to treat the announcement of LittleBigPlanet Karting with cynicism. Sony, of course, has attempted to hijack this sub-genre with games in the past ā but thereās something about LittleBigPlanet that works seamlessly with the idea of a kart racer.
It could be a strange type of nostalgia, the idea of reclaiming the lost memories of childhood ā racing frantically on bicycles, trying to build your own Kart with pram wheels. Kart racers donāt have any claim to realism ā theyāre about surrendering to your own childlike imagination and accepting a primitive set of rules.
And the same could be said about LittleBigPlanet
āI think Kart racers appeal to the kid in everyone,ā says William. āThereās a universality to driving around in a go kart in fantastic places ā and thereās a universality to the materials in LittleBigPlanet
āWho, when they were a little kid, didnāt play with construction paper, cardboard, felt and cloth ā cutting it, piecing it together. Sticking things together, acting out scenarios ā thatās LittleBigPlanet. To have that in a modern game taps into all those base memories and those base instincts, those notions of imaginations without boundaries. We didnāt care when we were little kids; we werenāt self conscious back thenā¦ā
āWith LittleBigPlanet and LittleBigPlanet Karting, maybe we should be able to express ourselves like we did as children,ā continues William. āIt should feel like revisiting that childhood.ā
When the young William Ho wasnāt dropping quarters into Jump and Bump, he was terrorising the streets with his buddy, pretending to be the highway patrol from CHiPs. His buddy was Jon, he was Ponch.
āWhen youāre a kid you imagine with your box cars, you imagine with your pedals,ā he says.
āAnd thereās no reason why we couldnāt place the ChiPs scenario into LittleBigPlanet Karting! Everyone has their own vivid memories to be inspired by. I think thereās going to be that common thread, people are going to be like, āI recognise that. That rings true to meā.ā
William hopes that creation will be a huge part of the LittleBigPlanet Karting user experience. Much like UGCās last title, ModNation Racers, LittleBigPlanet Karting will allow players to customise their karts, their Sackboy and, of course, create their own tracks. LittleBigPlanet Karting will provide more options for creation than any other racer ever conceived.
And in many ways that makes sense ā LittleBigPlanet is about appealing to our inner child, reinvigorating that creative spirit. Itās about abandoning our normal rules of what makes sense and letting our imaginations take control.
āWhen I was young I used to play with my Matchbox cars,ā remembers William.
āMy father was a cook in a kitchen, and I would hang out there ā I would take the soup cans off the shelf and take my Matchbox cars and drive them around. It was like a makeshift racecourse! That to me was so satisfying.ā
William hopes LittleBigPlanet will embody that same spirit.
āIāve been playing Kart games for decades now, literally decades,ā says William. āIt seems so long agoā¦ā
William Ho is making LittleBigPlanet Karting to satisfy a lifetime of creative curiosity; heās making it in the spirit of the kid who played CHiPs and made makeshift tracks with cans of crushed tomatoes ā but most of all heās making it for someone he loves.
William loves karting games, but his early memories of those first steps into are intertwined with memories of his sister ā who he played with constantly, competed with, threw green shells at. In a lot of ways LittleBigPlanet Karting is for her.
āWhen Kart racing came along I was like, wow, this is a game I can play over and over again,ā says William. āThis is a game I can play with my sister.
āAnd Iād be lying if I said there wasnāt a part of me that was making this game for my sister and me to enjoy all over again, to help us relive those memories.ā
Mark Serrels is the EIC for Kotaku Australia. You can follow him on Twitter!
Republished from Kotaku Australia with permission.