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A jam submission

Coral SongView game page

For Climate Game Jam 2024
Submitted by zivankira (@zivankira), TylerIsland, sweeyee3, k1nc — 3 hours, 36 minutes before the deadline
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Coral Song's itch.io page

Results

CriteriaRankScore*Raw Score
Use of Themes - how effectively or uniquely does it engage in the jam's themes?#15.0005.000
Promising Idea - How interesting is the concept? Would you want to play it?#24.8004.800
Reasonable Scope - How reasonable is the scope for the timeline of the jam?#154.2004.200
Overall#174.2004.200
Well Planned Production - Is there a clear production plan?#213.8003.800
Aesthetic / Art / Sound - How cohesive is the aesthetic? Is there a clear theme?#453.2003.200

Ranked from 5 ratings. Score is adjusted from raw score by the median number of ratings per game in the jam.

How does your concept engage in the jam's themes?
PDF HERE: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1u4u2egH76ENbvyu6BBuJXRod_4BTHK9r/view?usp=sharing | Coral Song (Working Title) is a coral reef growing simulator that takes its inspiration from contemporary debates around the afterlife of decommissioned offshore oil rigs. In imagining a world after fossil fuels, what happens to the tools of extraction? The estimated 12000 offshore oil and gas rigs in the world currently present a conundrum of waste material management. But despite the extractive violence performed through the oil rig, most oil rig sites have been hosts to biodiverse ecosystems by being a substrate for coral reef development. With studies showing rigs in California supporting the preservation of slow-growing rockfish from commercial overfishing. A site shrouded in complexities from its function as a tool by the oil and gas industry, an economic lifeline for marginalised communities, and location for the growth of underwater biodiversity. Through the mask of a cosy casual simulator, Coral Song hopes to highlight the complexities that exist from the varying actors in determining the future of decommissioned offshore oil rigs.

Use of Theme / Inspiration
On the deliberation of this year’s theme, we took a page from Anna Tsing’s seminal Mushroom at the End of the World, which asks the questions - What manages to live in the ruins we have made? What are the prerequisites for continuing life on earth? What from the present are stepping stones to the future? Guided by the terms reparation, remediation, and repair, we researched and pondered about current discourses surrounding the industry of oil and gas. It led us to the questions - What would happen to an oil rig after the end of fossil fuels? With its initial contribution to ecological harm, how does the site of an oil rig facilitate repair of the ecosystem that it exists within. The complexities around the oil rig with its relation to ecological harm, whilst simultaneously contributing to the preservation of ecological diversity was such a fascinating contrast. With the various disagreements that stretch from marine biologists to environmental groups, to its relation with big oil and marginalised communities brought to light a complexity of reality rather than a dichotomy of positions. Through a casual coral reef grow simulator, where opposition stems from environmental groups, and corporate interest, engages the theme of “Change the story”, whereby the “story” and narrative of an oil rig through an ecological lens has “changed”.

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Comments

Submitted(+2)

This game sounds promising! The concept of turning a decommissioned oil rig into a thriving marine ecosystem is both unique and timely. The complexities of environmental restoration and the potential for renewal in places once dominated by extraction are fascinating. Can't wait to see how this turns out!

Developer

Thanks! Though, being a small team with limited expertise, we would kindly request that you don't set your expectations too high! d( ^ ^ ;;)

Submitted(+2)

I think the concept is really cool and unique, I didn't know about decommissioned oil rigs becoming homes for coral and I think it would be cool to learn more!