Them's Fightin' Herds

Them's Fightin' Herds is an indie fighting game developed by Mane6 and published by Humble Bundle. Atypical of most side-scrolling fighting games, it features a cast of six all-female anthropomorphic ungulate characters fighting each other to find a champion worthy of gaining a magical key that will protect their world from predators. First released into early access in February 2018, the full release was on April 30, 2020 for Microsoft Windows, with macOS and Linux versions to follow.

Them's Fightin' Herds
Developer(s)Mane6
Publisher(s)Humble Bundle
Director(s)Francisco Copado
Producer(s)Aaron Stavely
Designer(s)Lauren Faust
Omari Smith
Programmer(s)Chris Huval (lead)
Patrick McCarthy
Kenneth Leung
Artist(s)Lindsay Towns
Lucas Ellinghaus
Lachlan Cartland
Writer(s)Lauren Faust (story)
Ryan Faust
Francisco Copado
Aaron Stavely
Composer(s)Stuart Ferguson
Whitetail
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
macOS
Linux
Release
  • Microsoft Windows
  • April 30, 2020
  • macOS, Linux
  • TBA
Genre(s)Fighting
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

The project is a spiritual successor to the Mane6's original planned fighting game Fighting Is Magic based on the animated television show My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic. Mane6 was a team of nine developers and part of the adult fandom of the show.[1][2] Fighting Is Magic featured the six main pony characters from that show. Early versions of this game were released in 2012, drawing attention from both players in the Evolution Championship Series due to the unique moves associated with non-bipedal characters in fighting games, as well as from Hasbro which owned the intellectual property to My Little Pony. After Hasbro sent the Mane6 a cease and desist letter, the Mane6 discarded the assets tied to the show, while keeping some of the fundamental gameplay factors to create the new title Them's Fightin' Herds. The creator of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, Lauren Faust, offered to help with designing the new characters for the game.[3][4] The development of the game was completed with crowdfunding through Indiegogo.

A separate effort created by fans not associated with the Mane6 team released their Fighting Is Magic: Tribute Edition of the original Mane6 My Little Pony-inspired game in early 2014. This game was made from various beta assets of the original which Mane6 developed in the first two years, and were later leaked by other parties.[5]

Gameplay and plot

Them's Fightin' Herds is a fighting game based on sapient four-legged hoofed creatures from the world of Fœnum, which is being threatened by the return of carnivorous beasts known as the Predators. The Predators were locked away in a separate realm, but they have found a way to escape it. To put an end to the threat, selected champions of the various Fœnum races are chosen as "Key Seekers" by their tribes to find the key that will lock the Predators away again. The Key Seekers must face each other in a friendly competition to determine which one will be the Key Keeper who will face the champion of the Predators.

The game uses a four-button fighting system: a button each for light, medium, heavy, and magic attacks, and includes staple fighting game maneuvers such as launchers, pushblocks, and cross-ups. There are six playable charactersArizona the cow (voiced by Tara Strong),[6] Velvet the reindeer (Tia Ballard),[6] Paprika the alpaca (Marieve Herington),[6] Oleander the unicorn (Alexa Kahn)[6] who can summon a demonic being known as "Fred" (Keith Ferguson), Pom the sheep (Allie Moreno)[6] and Tianhuo the longma (Kay Bess)[6]each with different fighting move sets and unique movement options such as flight, short hops, double jumps, or air dashes, and a seventh boss character.[7] Jessica Gee voices the game's announcer.[6] The seventh playable character, pirate goat Shanty, will also be available following the game's launch, due to the crowdfunding campaign reaching its stretch goals. The game supports both local and online multiplayer via a near-isometric pixel art lobby system. Players who also own BlazBlue: Central Fiction, Guilty Gear Xrd Rev 2 or Skullgirls on Steam will unlock special lobby avatars inspired by characters from those games.[8]

Story

The game's story mode begins with Arizona making her way from the prairie to Reine City, sent on her quest by her parents, as the declared Champion of the Prairie. Along the way, she passes through a system of caves that used to be a salt mine, which are now filled with shadowy predators. In Reine City, Arizona heads to the museum to find some clues about the Prophet's Key. When Velvet shows up and learns that Arizona is the Champion of the Prairie, she challenges Arizona to a fight on the steps in front of the museum. Arizona defeats her, and Velvet's ice sprites carry her away. Desperate to get Arizona out of the city, a citizen gives her his boat tickets and sends her off to the Alpake Highlands. In the Highlands, Arizona climbs up a mountain while fighting off birds of prey. At the top, exhausted, she is rescued by members of the local Alpake tribe. After waking up, she talks to their leader, Adobo, who warns her of the "Terror of the Foggy Mountaintops". Arizona is pursued by a mysterious figure in the fog, but the figure always stays hidden a distance away while laughing. At a clearing in the fog, Arizona examines a stone only to see it rumble; Paprika bursts out of it and proceeds to "fight" Arizona through a series of hugs, kisses, and fourth-wall-breaking stunts. Arizona prevails, leaving Paprika dazed and out cold.

In the Temple of the Ancestors, which Arizona learned about at the Reine City Museum and from Adobo, Arizona fights more predators while solving some puzzles. Finally, she reaches the Hall of the Monolith. Before she can inspect the monolith, Oleander shows up, and like with Velvet, realizes that she and Arizona are rivals. Oleander and Arizona begin fighting, with Fhtng th§ ¿nsp§kbl (or "Fred") helping her out as the battle progresses. Arizona eventually prevails, but Fred knocks her out and rants about how she is ruining his plans. Fred then wakes Oleander up to tell her that she won. While Oleander copies down the inscriptions on the monolith, Fred loots Arizona for all of the items she found along her journey. After the duo leave, Arizona wakes up, severely dazed, and at a loss for what to do next. If the player loses during the third phase of Oleander's fight, the same thing happens, but Fred does not knock Arizona out and talk about how she is ruining his plans.

My Little Pony: Fighting Is Magic

Development and gameplay

The My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic series, while aimed at young girls and their parents, has drawn a large number of adult fans from 15–35, typically male, who are often referred to as "bronies". These fans were drawn in by the creativity of Lauren Faust and her team, who wrote the show to appeal across generations. The show's characters, Flash animations, adventure-themed stories, and occasional pop cultural references are considered other draws for the older audience.[9]

Many members of the brony fandom are technology-savvy,[9] a common activity in the fandom being the creation of images of the show's ponies, parodying other commercial works including video games. Fighting Is Magic grew out of a set of images for a hypothetical "Marevel vs. Clopcom" game, parodying the Marvel vs. Capcom fighting game series, created by Anukan, who would later become one of the Mane6 developers.[10] Anukan didn't expect anything to come from these images, but found that at discussion boards, fans were postulating how the various pony characters would translate into fighting games; such as what sorts of moves that they would use. One of these users, Nappy, recognized the potential in realizing a complete game, and began the formation of Mane6, including Anukan, Jay Wright, Lucas Ellinghaus, James Workman, and Prominence.[10]

The team decided on using the Fighter Maker 2D game engine, despite having no prior experience with the software.[10] After getting in the basics of having characters hit one another, they discovered that they could get the engine to include wall bounces—the rebounding of a character from walls at the edges of the screen—which according to Ellinghaus, show "the potential for both the game and the team".[10] Much of the development work was spent in trying to achieve certain effects within the Fighter Maker engine, referred to by the team as "taming" the engine.[10]

The game was initially developed as a three button-based fighter, allowing to remain simple to be picked up by players but still offering a variety of combinations of moves, while limiting the amount of animations for the various moves for all characters. The three buttons were designed to mimic the light, medium, and heavy attacks of the Marvel vs. Capcom series.[10] However, the development team also wanted to include an EX system like the one in Street Fighter IV where pressing two attack buttons at the same time executes a special move. Within the initial game engine, Fighter Maker, the game would only register two simultaneous button presses if they were within the same processing time frame, which would hinder gameplay. To work around this, the team designed a fourth button, (a "magic" button as described by Mane6), used to have the character remain still while doing a specific activity that would build up an EX meter, such as Twilight Sparkle reading a book. With a full EX meter, the player would then be able to execute special moves with any of the other three buttons.[10]

Character selection screen, in its form at the time of the cease and desist

Mane6 focused initial efforts to build up the six main characters from the show as the initial fighters, but have stated that an expanded roster of up to seventeen characters would be in their planned final version.[10] The game was to be downloadable and free-to-play, with local and online multiplayer modes as well as a story mode. Character-specific moves were to be present in-game.[11] The individual movesets for each character are based not only on how they are represented in the show, but also considering other characters in fighting games to fill out their fighting style.[10] Twilight Sparkle, in the show, is a unicorn with powerful magic abilities, which the Mane6 matched with Akuma from the Street Fighter series, while Rainbow Dash, an aggressive pegasus, was compared with Magneto's playstyle in the Marvel vs. Capcom series.[10] Fluttershy, a timid character within the show, does not fight directly, but instead her animal companions fight for her, creating a playstyle similar to Eddie from Guilty Gear XX or Phoenix Wright in Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3.[10] In another case, Pinkie Pie, a hyperactive pony who is shown to have some fourth wall reality-warping powers in the show, allowed the team to experiment with a wide range of haphazard moves. They had designed one move where Pinkie would use her "party cannon" to launch a present at the opponent, and then she would then pop out of the present at close range. As they were developing the game, Persona 4 Arena was released, in which the character of Kuma/Teddie had a similar move. They realized they were thinking along the same lines as the professional developers and continue to work more of Pinkie's moves based on Teddie's moveset.[10] While these other characters helped to inspire additional moves, the Mane6 team made sure to stay true to the characterization on the show and not introduce moves that would be outside of this, such as Fluttershy herself making an aggressive attack.[10]

After each character's moveset was tested and refined based on testing feedback, the team then began to animate each character, first by creating Flash-based animations and then transforming these to sprites needed for Fighter Maker.[10] The team noted that the pony shape of the characters proved an additional challenge both visually and for the engine. With most fighting games, players can easily identify heads, arms, and legs, and know where to watch for attacks, but the same was not true for the ponies. They proceeded to add effects like sparks on the attacking character and opponent responses to help players recognize attacks.[10] In terms of the engine, the hitboxes for the ponies were more horizontal than vertical as would be the case with humanoid fighter characters, and they had to work around this in the engine to accurately model attacks.[10] Additionally the more horizontal shapes of the characters limited how much of the fighting stage space they could use; they overcame this within the game by using a 3/4ths view of the characters that shortened their on-screen lengths giving them more space to work with.[7]

Release

The team had released early pre-alpha gameplay footage as they added the main six characters to the game.[1][12] Though the team had expected the game to be popular within the brony community, the game has been noticed by other fighting game players through these videos. The team was invited to demonstrate their game at the July 2012 Evolution Championship Series by one of its founders, Joey "MrWizard" Cuellar, as part of other indie fighting games.[10] For the 2013 Evolution series, the game was one of seventeen nominees for the "Player's Choice" slot in the main competition.[13]

Though the game is an unlicensed work of Hasbro's My Little Pony franchise, the Mane6 team did not receive any cease and desist notices from the company until February 8, 2013. Like much of the rest of the Internet phenomenon surrounding Friendship is Magic, Hasbro had been mostly tolerant; allowing episodes of the show along with parodies and mashups of the works to be redistributed freely across the Internet. This helped to create a participatory culture that has drawn a broader audience to the show, even going as far as to say they have no intentions of ever filing takedown notices as they see this as "Free Advertising and spreading".[14][15] The Mane6 had taken no monetary donations for their work and planned to keep the game as a free release.[10] Further, while a fighting game, they did not show any characters getting wounded, or show any signs of blood, as to keep with the generally nonviolent theme of the show.[10] The Mane6 had stated that even if the project was shut down, they had learned much from the effort to apply towards their next project with original characters, which they were already planning.[10]

Cease and desist from Hasbro

An unfinished version of the game was leaked to 4chan's /mlp/ board on August 2, 2012. Mane6 responded by terminating their QA program and pushing the project into a closed development cycle.[16] In February 2013, shortly after the 2013 EVO voting selection, Hasbro's lawyers sent a cease and desist letter to the Mane6 team; This was only a few weeks before they had expected to be completed with the initial version of their game.[17] They obeyed the cease and desist letter, halting all production and removing all assets from their website, while Mane6 attempted to enter legal negotiations with Hasbro. Artist Elosande resigned from the team.[18] The team also sought legal advice to fight the cease and desist but were told it would be an expensive battle.[17] Mane6 were unable to come to agreements with Hasbro and started to redo the game using new artwork assets.[19] They subsequently renamed the new game to simply Fighting Is Magic.[17] On February 28, 2014, a fandom news site, Equestria Daily, announced the release of a "finished" version of the game. Using a combination of the Mane6 team's unfinished build and fan-made contributions, this version features all main six characters of the television show as playable, as well as new stages and multiplayer capability. Now known as "Fighting is Magic: Tribute Edition", the game is openly available for download and play.

Them's Fightin' Herds

Promotional artwork of the game's main six playable characters, based on Lauren Faust's designs. From left going clockwise: Oleander the unicorn with her Unicornomicon, Tianhuo the longma, Velvet the reindeer, Paprika the alpaca, Arizona the cow, and Pom the lamb with one of her puppies.

With no legal option to continue to use the My Little Pony characters, the Mane6 team opted to keep most of their work to date and reworked the game with new art assets, retaining the theme of four-legged creatures.[19] Faust herself supported the fan effort, understanding the "irony" of a fighting game based on a show about friendship, but appreciated that "the original version of the game was that they made the Ponies fight in character" without resorting to typical fighter elements like weapons, and praising the animations that the team has already built.[17][7] On hearing of the cease and desist, Faust contacted the team, offering to provide some of her time to create new characters for their game,[17][20] and her official involvement with the project was announced at the end of February.[19] The team accepted her offer; developer Jay Wright noted that "you can't copyright Lauren's distinctive style", and that while the game will still be unique, it will likely still carry the spirit of My Little Pony.[17] According to Faust, she was happy to provide "my little part to help Mane6 finish up this game in a way that stays true to the spirit of the original—but in a way that can freely be shared".[21] Faust also helped to develop the story and setting for the game. She noted that the common story concept for fighting games, where the characters would be fighting to be the champions of a tourney, was overused, and instead designed one around where the individual characters have already been determined to be champions from their individual tribes, and now are fighting each other for the key, each believing it is their destiny to obtain and use the key against the Predators.[7]

The characters in the game will remain four-legged as with the My Little Pony version, which Mane6 developer Francisco Copado believes is a first for a fighting game.[17] Silhouette teaser images released by the Mane6 team showed a trio of four-legged non-pony characters as preliminary designs for the new game, while as of April 2013, three additional characters are still in development.[17]

The Mane6 also gained contributions from Lab Zero Games, developers of Skullgirls. Lab Zero had developed a fighting game engine, named Z-Engine, from scratch for their own title. While others had contacted Lab Zero to use the Z-Engine for other fighting games, the studio was drawn to the work of the Mane6 who, according to Lab Zero's Mike Zaimont, had shown a high degree of competence of what made a good fighting game compared to other efforts, and wanted to support their work.[22] Lab Zero used an Indiegogo crowd-sourcing effort to gain development funds, and having readily cleared their initial target of $150,000 and with additional stretch goals of new characters and content for their game, included a $725,000 target that would allow Mane6 to use and distribute the Z-Engine for free as part of their new game, and challenged the brony community to help towards that via online donation.[23] The goal was met on the final day of the funding campaign, which was on March 27, 2013.[24] The Z-engine allowed the Mane6 team to expand beyond the limitations of Fighter Maker, thought they kept some of the conventions learned from working with Fighter Maker, such as the use of 3/4rd views to reduce the horizontal lengths of the four-legged characters.[7] The Skullgirls engine also brought in the open-source networking code GGPO ("Good Game Peace Out"), designed specifically for overcoming known limitations of playing fighting games online. GGPO uses a system called "rollback" that delays the game's response to the user's input slightly, masked by character animations, coupled with predictive behavior to appear to give zero-latency gameplay for players against online opponents.[25][26]

In August 2015, the Mane6 revealed the revamped title, Them's Fightin' Herds, which was suggested by Craig McCracken.[27] They announced that they would be starting an Indiegogo campaign starting on September 21, 2015, seeking to raise US$436,000 to complete the game.[28] The funding was successful with a final funding amount of US$586,346, meeting the stretch goals to offer the game on OS X and Linux computers alongside Microsoft Windows, and the introduction of a seventh playable character, a goat, stages and stories based on that character.[22]

By early February 2018, the Mane6 affirmed the game's early access release on February 22, 2018. They had gained support from Humble Bundle for publishing; in turn, Humble Bundle had reached out to publishers of other fighting game developers to bring themed assets into Them's Fightin' Herds, including Guilty Gear Xrd, BlazBlue: Central Fiction, and Skullgirls.[29]

The game was released on April 30, 2020.[30] Only the first chapter of the game's story mode was available at launch, though all six characters were fully playable in the game's competitive modes. Mane6 will continue to support the game and add additional chapters to the story mode following release.[31] Art and gameplay for Shanty was showcased by Mane6 around August 2020, though they had no planned date when the character would be released.[32]

Reception

IGN gave the game a score of 8/10.[33]

One of the challenges that the Mane6 developers have stated with getting people to play the game is the stigma of its basis on the My Little Pony foundations and association with the brony fandom; however, Mane6 president Aaron Stavely says that once they have been able to get fighting game players to try out the game, they have generally seen them impressed with the game and walk away with positive feedback.[22]

Them's Fightin' Herds was supposed to be one of four games used for the open tournaments in the revamped online version of Evo 2020, which was cancelled.[34] Both Them's Fightin' Herds and Skullgirls were used for the online events due to their capable forms of online play enabled by GGPO, along with Mortal Kombat 11 and Killer Instinct, which were both developed with internal versions of rollback netcodes.[25]

gollark: This is generally considered bad.
gollark: You insisted you were right, weren't really up to debating in good faith about it, launched a nonsensical vote, and ignored all criticism.
gollark: What I am saying (part of it) is that *regardless* of whether you think changing the rules like this is a good idea - I don't, gibson might, palaiologogoasgaosfiaosd does - the way this whole thing has been handled has been awful.
gollark: Thus, bee you.
gollark: Which you did by cancelling it and others like it.

References

  1. Funk, John (21 July 2010). "My Little Ponies Throw Down in Fan-Made Fighter". The Escapist Magazine. Themis Group, Inc. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  2. Ченцов, Илья (28 July 2011). Большие Безобразия маленьких пони [Big Hijinks of Little Ponies] (PDF). Страна Игр (in Russian) (324): 62–70. EAN-13 4607157100056. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  3. Zivalich, Nikole (21 July 2011). "My Little Pony: Fighting Is Magic -- Nugget From The Net". G4. G4 Media. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  4. Kuang, Jason (28 July 2011). "My Little Pony gets a 2D fighter: Bronies, time to knuckle up". 2d-x.com. Second Dimension Entertainment. Archived from the original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  5. Koch, Cameron (4 March 2014). "Fan-Made My Little Pony Fighting Game Available To Download". Game Informer. Archived from the original on 10 March 2014. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  6. Mane6 (February 10, 2018). "Introducing the Cast of Them's Fightin' Herds". Official Them's Fightin' Herds forums. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  7. Isaac, Chris (19 October 2015). "Interview: Them's Fightin' Herds' Lauren Faust and the Mane6 Team on Their Fighting Game". The Mary Sue. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
  8. Wood, Austin (February 9, 2018). "Years later, My Little Pony-inspired fighting game Them's Fightin' Herds gets a release date". PC Gamer. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  9. Wattercutter, Angela (2011-06-09). "My Little Pony Corrals Unlikely Fanboys Known as 'Bronies'". Wired. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
  10. McGee, Maxwell (4 January 2013). "The Most Unlikely Fighter You've Never Heard Of". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
  11. Noble, McKinley (23 June 2011). "My Little Pony Gets a Street Fighter Style Fighting Game". ITworld. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  12. Conduit, Jessica (5 November 2011). "Twilight Sparkle is a My Little Pony to be reckoned with in Fighting is Magic". Joystiq. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  13. Yin-Poole, Wesley (2013-01-09). "Fan-made My Little Pony fighting game in with a chance of making it to Evo 2013". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2013-01-09.
  14. Griffiths, Daniel Nye (2011-08-15). "Colt success: My Little Pony's reboot, Friendship is Magic". Wired UK. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
  15. Wallenstein, Andrew (2011-07-26). "Brands frown on fair use". Variety. Retrieved 2011-07-26.
  16. Corriea, Alexa Ray (2012-08-03). "'My Little Pony: Fighting is Magic' fan game suffers unfinished code leak". The Verge. Retrieved 2012-08-03.
  17. Campbell, Colin (2013-04-23). "Bronies Fighting Ponies: The Magic of Friendship". Polygon. Retrieved 2013-04-23.
  18. Hillier, Brenna (11 February 2013). "My Little Pony: Fighting is Magic fan game shut down". VG247. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  19. Hillier, Brenna (3 March 2013). "My Little Pony creator to help resurrect Fighting is Magic game". VG247. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  20. Griffiths, Daniel Nye (2013-02-11). "First World Problems: YouTube At The Vatican, Justin Timberlake, Apple Dividends And My Little Pony". Forbes. Retrieved 2013-02-14.
  21. Davis, Ian (2013-03-04). "Fighting is Magic Rebounds Thanks To MLP Producer". Escapist. Retrieved 2013-03-27.
  22. Van Allen, Eric (May 22, 2020). "A Former My Little Pony Fighting Game's Journey From Cease and Desist to Evo Online". USGamer. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  23. Yin-Poole, Wesley (2013-03-18). "Skullgirls dev offers its engine to My Little Pony: Fighting is Magic dev for free". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  24. Pitcher, Jenna (2013-03-28). "Fighting is Magic gets Skullgirls engine; Skullgirls campaign ends with five DLC fighters". Polygon. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
  25. Lawson, Aurich (May 14, 2020). "How a rejected My Little Pony game helped save a historic tournament". Ars Technica. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  26. Pusch, Ricky (October 19, 2019). "Explaining how fighting games use delay-based and rollback netcode". Ars Technica. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  27. ManeSix DevTeam (2020-02-18). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6vNZgBn-y8?t=5275. Retrieved 2020-02-23. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  28. Matulef, Jeffrey (2015-09-22). "My Little Pony: FiM creator launches brony fighting game crowdfunding campaign". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2015-09-22.
  29. Prell, Sam (February 14, 2018). "This My Little Pony-inspired fighting game finally makes online lobbies worth your time". GamesRadar. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  30. Aaron Stavely (2020-03-27). "1.0 Release Delayed by One Month - Now April 30th". Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  31. Moyse, Chris (March 10, 2020). "Them's Fightin' Herds finally ready to bolt out of Early Access". Destructoid. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  32. Moyse, Chris (August 15, 2020). "Them's Fightin' Herds' Shanty is definitely the G.O.A.T." Destructoid. Retrieved August 15, 2020.
  33. Saltzman, Mitchell (May 5, 2020). "Them's Fightin' Herds Review". IGN. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
  34. O'Conner, James (May 13, 2020). "EVO Online 2020 Announced, And Smash Bros. Has Been Cut". GameSpot. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
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