Geometric Art made with Geometer's Sketchpad
Geometric Art made with Geometer's Sketchpad
One of the things I enjoy about roguelike deckbuilders is how there are multiple valid builds, even if many of them are silly or "suboptimal".
I'm less familiar with physical tabletop card games than pc games, but I would imagine they each have some of that aspect in common.
More Geometric Art
Here's a piece of geometric art I made recently that turned out nice.
I'm a little disappointed that I lost motivation after making just a few pieces of generative art for Genuary, but the ones I did make turned out well.
Here's the code that makes it work.
Some procedural art I made using Clickteam Fusion.
It worked out pretty well for Georgia O'Keeffe too, so it looks like you're in good company.
Great work so far!
I'm interested in seeing what else you come up with.
Genuary 02: Layers upon layers upon layers.
genuary.art/prompts#jan2
This was my attempt at the Jan 1st prompt for Genuary "Vertical or horizontal lines only"
Here's their website and list of prompts: genuary.art
Shag Carpet Looking Pattern
I really like this color scheme, the pattern is really cool too.
I'm just now realizing that I can't upload the full resolution image on bluesky, lol.
I found a way to render geometric art at higher resolutions, with this being the first piece I've made using the new technique.
I find pen plotter art to be so fascinating. I don't have the space or money to get started, but it's something I intend to experiment with at some point in the future.
This one in particular turned out great!
This reminds me of the art style of Chris Foss. Very cool.
A ribbonlike line leaves a trace of an orbit around two points forming a shape like two partially conjoined spheres, the line alternates between a gradient of green, yellow and orange, and an alternate gradient from light gray to black. The gray gradient is more noticeable on the bottom half of the shape.
Fancy Peanut (Geometric Art)
A series of black and white tubes with a texture of curved lines overlap in a grid pattern at a 45 degree angle. The top right and bottom left portions being overall lighter in color than the alternate set of corners.
Geometric Art
I disagree on a lot of the specifics, but I am sympathetic towards people losing their jobs to automation, regardless of the type of work or the type of automation. If the economic benefits of automation were more evenly distributed there are cases where that could offset the environmental costs.
There are a series of alternating wavy bands of colors, starting at dark red, moving to red, then orange, yellow, green, navy blue, then cycling back to dark red. On closer inspection, the lines are a series of partially overlapping dots, similar to Kirby Dots, that only form the illusion of alternating bands of color. It looks a bit like fractal art. There is a line cutting across the top right corner where the pattern has a distorted section that doesn't quite match the rest of the image.
This is a similar patten to the previous one I posted, with the Moire Patterns even more clearly visible, if in fact they are accurate Moire Patterns and not just something that looks similar.
It appears as a series of alternating stripes in various shades of green, blue and purple forming geometric patterns as they converge and separate.
I'm not sure if there's a more specific name for this kind of pattern, but it seems to have Moire Patterns in it, if you want a term to use when looking into something similar.
In a best case scenario, being able to make video games using an AI game engine would lower the bar for entry, with both good and bad effects.
We might see a few genuinely interesting or even good games from people who otherwise wouldn't give game dev a shot, and a mountain of garbage too.