How Does Game Production Stages Work?

Making a game is like baking a cake, it has different stages, and each one adds something special to the final treat.

First, you plan out what kind of cake (or game) you want. You decide on the flavor, how many layers, and if there will be frosting or sprinkles. This part is like coming up with the idea for the game, what it looks like, what people can do, and where the story goes.

Next, you start mixing the ingredients (or building parts of the game). You make the batter (like designing characters), bake the cake layers (like making levels or backgrounds), and prepare the frosting (like writing the code that makes things move or happen).

Then, you put everything together, stacking the layers, adding the frosting, and putting on the sprinkles. This is like testing the game to make sure everything works well and looks nice.

Finally, it's time to serve the cake, or release the game for everyone to play! People get to enjoy what you made, just like they would a delicious cake. Making a game is like baking a cake, it has different stages, and each one adds something special to the final treat.

First, you plan out what kind of cake (or game) you want. You decide on the flavor, how many layers, and if there will be frosting or sprinkles. This part is like coming up with the idea for the game, what it looks like, what people can do, and where the story goes.

Next, you start mixing the ingredients (or building parts of the game). You make the batter (like designing characters), bake the cake layers (like making levels or backgrounds), and prepare the frosting (like writing the code that makes things move or happen).

Then, you put everything together, stacking the layers, adding the frosting, and putting on the sprinkles. This is like testing the game to make sure everything works well and looks nice.

Finally, it's time to serve the cake, or release the game for everyone to play! People get to enjoy what you made, just like they would a delicious cake.

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Examples

  1. A child draws a picture, then colors it in, and finally adds details to make it look like a finished artwork.

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