This jam is now over. It ran from 2021-02-01 07:00:00 to 2021-03-01 07:00:00. View results
π Adults only, please! Sexual content ahoy. π
It's almost February! And with it comes Valentine's Day, our celebration of St. Valentine, the patron saint of... epilepsy? That can't be right. Well, regardless—
Let's make some horny games!
For the fifth time, you have all of February to make a horny game, and then two weeks to vote on everyone else's horny games. There are lots of categories, so lots of chances to place first! And if you don't place first, that's okay, because there are no prizes!
What constitutes a "horny game" is entirely up to you! Despite what you might expect, plenty of previous submissions (and winners!) have had no sex at all, though plenty have been very explicit as well. I'm happy as long as we push the boundary of what "horny game" brings to mind! Go deep, go broad, go abstract, go way off into left field!
If you need some inspiration, check out the previous jams: Strawberry Jam, Strawberry Jam 2, Strawberry Jam 3, and Strawberry Jam 4. I also maintain this collection of every entry that has placed top three in any category in any Strawberry Jam!
Feel free to mingle in the jam community or on Discord, where you can share your progress or ask for advice from experts. Game dev experts, I mean, not horny experts. Maybe they're also horny experts? I don't know what that means!
I'll probably be tweeting about the jam on my Twitter, @eevee, and possibly also on my smut-laden alt, @squishfox.
Voting lasts for two weeks after the end of the jam, i.e. the first half of March. Anyone who submits a game or collaborated on a submitted game can vote.
(If you have collaborators, you can add them by editing the game, clicking More > Admins at the top, adding them as an admin, and clicking the checkbox to show them as a collaborator. This also lets them list the game on their own Itch profile.)
Please reserve some time to play the other entries, vote on them, and let the authors know what you think! You know, constructively.
The voting categories are as arbitrary as everything else, but I have included some sample interpretations.
Great news! You've already got the most important part: motivation. And the jam lasts a whole month, which should be plenty of time to dip your toes into something new!
You can ask for help (or teammates!) on Discord, and/or try one of the following game making gizmos, which all β work on any computer, β don't require programming experience, β don't focus too much on custom artwork, β are well-known enough that you can easily get help with them, and β produce things that can be played in a browser.
bitsy is a teeny tiny game editor for making little stories with a very-low-res pixel art aesthetic. It's best at exploration and conversation. No programming required. Actually, programming it is nearly impossible, so there's a challenge if you want one.
Twine makes choose-your-own-adventures with simple links between pages, and often has no artwork at all — though you can certainly add some, and do all manner of other shenanigans if you're dedicated enough. It's ultimately just HTML. Heck, you could skip Twine altogether and make a story out of separate HTML documents.
Inform 7 is an English-like programming language for making those old-school text adventures where you GO NORTH and GO SOUTH and then give up and buy the hint manual. It is programming, but the code reads like English text, and making a small world with some simple interactions is shockingly straightforward. The documentation is written in a friendly narrative style that assumes no programming experience whatsoever.
If you're an artist and have a very strong aversion to computers (rightly so!), you could try Flick, a sort of art-based simple alternative to Twine where the player makes choices by clicking on particular colors in an image.
If you're a programmer and have just never tried making a game, you could try LΓVE (an unopinionated 2D Lua engine that I like a lot), the PICO-8 (a retro-styled "fantasy console" with built-in tools for making art, sounds, music, and levels... but you're on your own with physics), Godot (an integrated Unity-style editor, totally open source), or of course Unity which some people like I guess. The Discord has folks with experience with all of these and probably some suggestions for more.
Other lists of possible game-making tools for beginners:
Keep in mind that I've been copy-pasting this list across jam pages for like five years now, so there might be newfangled things I haven't even heard of! Ask around, search itch for tools, see what you can find!
Q: I don't know what kind of game to make!
A: Pick a thing that's horny to you — uniquely to you, if possible! — and make a game about it! Think about the types of games and game mechanics you like, and how they might blend well with the stuff you're into. You can always look at previous years' entries and shamelessly rip them off — after all, part of the point of this jam is to fill the world with more kinds of horny games!
Q: Can I start early?
A: Since this is a ranked jam, it is slightly frowned upon, but not forbidden. But as mentioned above: please fill in the jam submission field with what your progress was when the jam started, so we can maintain a thin façade of fairness.
Q: Nice butt.
A: That's not a question but thanks! Can't believe so many of you said this that I had to add it to the FAQ.
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