comments (10)

  • Fraterkes

  • There's a good People Make Games video about this from a few days ago

    https://youtu.be/Is8N7B9b0GQ

    archermarks

  • > The entire process is driven by instructions on a card drawn from a special deck created by the artist.

    I like this. I like that his system pushes the creative process forward without relinquishing the actual creative part of it (making the map tile).

    wxw

  • There was another project I saw years ago that this reminds me of. It was a guy who had been running a simulated city/community for like 20 years. The whole thing was done on pen and paper and used complex rule system he had devised. Similar pre-internet outsider art vibe.

    solomonb

  • I used to do things like this when I was a kid (less extreme, never more than a single sheet of paper), where I would create some natural features: a lake shore or river, maybe a freeway or two or a railroad and then start platting out a subdivision in the open spaces. It was a delightfully meditative practice and maybe I should start doing it again.

    dhosek

  • The card deck procedure is the most interesting part to me. It makes the map feel less like a drawing and more like a system Jerry is observing over decades. Maybe i need to follow his rules for a map of my own.

    rode1974

  • The most Borgesian thing to ever be posted on HN.

    wanderer2323

  • I know Jerry Map (I hope that someday will be a exposition in Spain) because I love it, I love the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outsider_art. The people who maybe mad and they built a world with own rules.

    I remember the book of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Darger or https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_Fortress or Cataclysm DDA .

    And weird games as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nomic .

    mdtrooper

  • Reminds me a bit of the truck driver who's been building a scale model of NYC for 20 years. That crossed HN 3 months ago.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47657268

    macintux

  • Whoa.

    In my grade school years, I made many maps of my imaginary world. By high school, I was putting them into my computer, one 16x16 grid at a time. Had to make sure the edges matched up. Then I wrote code to print them on the Epson MX-80 dot matrix. The poster-board I tiled them on was still in the basement, though many of the squares were falling off.

    It was easier after I coded a moving 64x64 buffer.

    FarmerPotato