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Black & White from Lionhead Studios released originally back in 2001 went on to great reviews, and won various awards. Sadly, it's one game that has also been lost to time but the openblack project plans to revive it with open source.

I originally covered this project way back in 2019, and it seems it's come a long way since then, although still heavily under development. Yesterday, September 4th, the openblack project had a first actual release.

Features implemented:

  • Camera movement system which matches Black & White.
  • Landscape with higher resolution thanks to intermediate rendering of the landscape texture.
  • Model rendering and animation.
  • Morphable mesh rendering.
  • Audio support.
  • Dynamic sky controls.
  • Pathfinding for villagers.
  • Physics using bullet physics.
  • Early AI state machine.
  • The LHVM virtual machine is integrated and reverse engineered.
  • Runs on modern Windows, MacOS and Linux.
  • Experimental Android, iOS, web assembly support.

There are some known issues like some colours being off and no launcher or global configuration options, so you need to launch it with command line arguments to find the assets. All of this of course will be improved as the project matures.

See more on the GitHub. You need a copy of the original game to run it which sadly is not easily available since Lionhead Studios no longer exist and the publisher Electronic Arts hasn't put it up anywhere.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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There's a reason Black & White was quickly forgotten. This was the game that marked the beginning of the end for Peter Molyneux. It had some neat ideas, but it all felt rather disjointed, like it was just a prototype, and came nowhere close to fulfilling Molyneux's lofty promises which quickly earned Lionhead Studios the unfavorable nickname Lyin' Head Studios.
Ooooh, we got this notion
That we'd quite like to sail the ocean
So we're buildin' a big boat to leave here for good.

We're not keen on sinkin'
So we're all sittin' here and thinkin'
Cos we built it too big and we've run out of wood.

Eidle eidle eee
Eidle eidle eee
We simply can't leave til we get some more wood.

Oooh, we're note keen on sinkin'
so that's why we're sittin' thinkin'
cos we simply can't leave til we get some more wood.
Quoting: voxOh wow. I thought I would never see this cracked gem reimplemented. What a time to be alive! Despite it being somewhat experimental and janky, I have some of the fondest memories about it. The last game by Peter Molyneaux that I've played. I never even heard about a Fable for a million years and then I don't see his handwriting there. An RPG? What? Was it any good? Then he went completely off the rails seemingly, what a shame.

Somehow Bullfrog Productions were in the business of making groundbreaking games from the start and Peter was very lucky with the people that went to work for him. Did you know that Demis Hassabis started as a level designer in Syndicate, then went to be a lead programmer in Theme Park, then he designed the AI in Black & White, made Evil Genius and then went to create a DeepMind? - an AI startup that started to beat starcrafters and fold proteins, making a serious advance in the scientific avant-garde (and online ass-whooping)
Ha, the beginning of Bullfrog Productions is one of the best stories I've ever heard for a video game company... Peter had started a company shipping baked beans named Taurus. Commodore called him up one day, thinking he was running a company named Torus that made software, and they gave him an Amiga 1000... so he and a friend started learning how to program for it, eventually coming up with the idea of Populous and the rest is history.
harre Sep 10
I replayed Black & White a few years ago and it was quite fun until I got to a level where you start getting attacked straight away and I didn't enjoy that. I'm more into a more relaxed gameplay where I don't need to rush.

I tested out this a bit and it works well. Is the creature implemented in the game yet in open black?


Last edited by harre on 10 September 2024 at 10:04 pm UTC
redneckdrow Sep 17
I prefer the second game, but I have to admit I miss some features of the first, such as Creature Isle. Not to mention the creature variety and skirmish mode.

You had 5 choices in B&W2's base game, but the tiger and lion were functionally identical. The creature a.i. is much improved (in that it acually works half the time), but the game is also a good deal shorter. Battle of the Gods is basically the antithesis of Creature Isle, being ludicrously difficult, and somewhat double-plus-un-fun. You get a sixth creature choice, but only if you don't import a save, making things even harder for a good deity.

Man, I'm really talking myself out of playing B&W2 again. It is a bit of a slog. The fan patches help iron out issues in both games.
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