Showing posts with label icon strategy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label icon strategy. Show all posts

Monday, 21 May 2018

Iconography in EVE Online

EVE is old!

Every so often I am reminded that EVE is actually getting up there, like a nephew that pops up on occasion and every time you think to yourself "I remember when he was just a kid!".

We're now in 2018 and had this been a person in Denmark where I live, we're talking about a teenager just getting ready to have his first sexual encounters at 15 years of age.

Backdrop

When the game launched in 2003, I am not sure they had put much thought into a clear vision for iconography, they kept it simple and understandable. People could tell the difference between a ship and a container - but many icons were identical, only differing in size. When things are getting hairy, this can be difficult.
Detail wise - the image format PNG did not become an international standard until a few months after launch in 2003. I can image that working with image files back then was a lot different.
Since then, the focus was on getting the game up and running, fixing bugs and getting in new features - icons were not that high on the totem pole to get attention.



Present day

Fast forward to 2015, 3 years ago - things were in place to launch a strategy on iconography.
This sought to update existing iconography structures and lay down a path to follow for new icons that would later be launched, depending on new content, ships, containers, structures, roles and so on.
Developer "CCP Arrow" lead the way. There was a logic behind the new path:
  • Ships: Triangles
  • Drones: M's
  • Structures: Boxes
And with the new structure in place you would then also iterate on the same theme and come up with variations depending on role/effect of the items/ships you would see out and about in the void.

Fermentation

Give things a few years to ferment and players start to compile data and present in a teaching environment. What followed the strategy was then as nature predicts - a player eventually doing something about that data.

Reddit user u/OperationTechnician posted this image that covers mostly all icons (barring future changes) compiled into one easy-to-handle image.

Well done.




(source)