posted by
benlehman at 03:51pm on 15/03/2006
Am I the only designer in the world who doesn't keep tons of notebooks around?
Notebooks?.
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(no subject)
We fully expect you to surrender your Game Designer Licence as soon as you get that whole passport thing straightened out.
Or was that your Licence to Kill? I keep getting them confused...
(no subject)
I mean, I keep all of my ideas in my head. Otherwise, how are they going to mix right?
I do have one notebook, but it was a gift from my brother, so it's mostly sentimental. I've used about 8 pages. No, wait, I used two more the other day, so ten. It's great for keeping stuff in, though! I use it for passport photos, rail tickets, visa forms.
yrs--
--Ben
(no subject)
* Tactile value of writing assists thought process
* Allows a matter to be "closed" to it can be returned to with fresher eyes.
* A need to robust archiving.
* A love of doodling :)
There are huge swaths of organizational thinking out there that categorizes the various ways that people prefer to keep things organized, be it for business or for creative purposes. There are a lot of interesting ideas, but one recurring theme is that people should find what works for them and stick with it. All in all, it's not shocking that you'll find divergence among game designers.
I will say one advantage of not going with a notebook is that you get to avoid the holy wars about what _kind_ of notebook one should use. :)
(no subject)
I puzzle me.
But if I did keep a notebook, it would be moleskine. (Indeed, the afformentioned single notebook is just that.)
(no subject)
...
Er.
Not that I engage in the aforementioned holy wars, nope nope.
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I find that if I try to keep my ideas all in my head, some fall out and other people pick them up and use them. This way, I've put them away.
The primary function it serves is actually the mnemonic of writing the ideas down. They function better as little diagrams than a pile of half-ideas.
(no subject)
yrs--
--Ben
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(no subject)
And if I don't write stuff down at all it gets forgotten too often, at least the deeper details.