From
June 1, 2012 to November 30, 2012, the OHR community was once again given the
opportunity to relive the days when random battles were accepted and game
design was about visiting towns and crawling through dungeons, and then get
rewarded for implementing the throwback design into their games. The contest,
called Heart of the OHR, had a simple rule: make, add to, or finish a
traditional OHRRPG.
This
year we had an overwhelming turnout. With three categories to enter, fifteen
people rose to the challenge. And meet the challenge they did. One author
submitted the first ever “OHR Legends” release, the classic Vikings of Midgard, which has now earned
the world’s first Heart of the OHR Legends badge. The condition for earning the
“Legends” title is to release a game previously rereleased for a Heart of the
OHR contest but with new content. In the “Rereleased” category, three authors
released new content to games we’ve played before, with one of those games originally
released as an original for the 2010 contest. Thirteen authors (including one
who released a release, and the one who released the Legends title) produced
new games never before seen in the OHR community for the coveted “Originals”
category, and many of them knocked their entries out of the park. With a
whopping 17 entries total, these authors’ contributions made the 2012 Heart of
the OHR among the best contests in the OHR’s history for turnout (the 2001
48-Hour contest still holds the lead with 19 entries) and one of the best for
quality. It was also one of the few contests where nearly every entry was rated
generously. The Heart of the OHR 2012’s average contest score was 6.14, which
is more than a third of a point above Heart of the OHR 2010’s average of 5.8.
With so many great games released in 2010, this seemed like an unbelievable
feat. But mission accomplished nonetheless.
However,
even with so many high praises given to the games of Heart of the OHR 2012,
only two could reign supreme: the one for the original category and the one for
the rereleased category. The rest had to fight for second place and beyond.
Here
again is the story of that battle for the Heart of the OHR: