Warren Spector Explains Camera Issues in Epic Mickey
But here's the deal, what I try to be completely clear about is that this is not a platforming game. This is a game that takes platforming elements and adventure game elements and role-playing elements and merges them. So we couldn't tune the camera perfectly for platforming or for action adventure. It's a very different camera style. What we did is try to find the best compromise in the moment and give the player as much manual control as we could. So we took the hardest problem in third-person gaming and made it harder by trying to accommodate two different playing styles.
In the full interview he goes into a little more depth about the intricacies of designing a camera for each of these game types. Spector also says that any game can be easily broken if one tries, asserting that some may be going out of their way to create problems. However, by his own admission, the trouble seems rooted in the fundamental decision in the design to straddle two game styles. As Brian found in his Epic Mickey Field Report, the struggles with the basic mechanics make it tough to ever get going in the game.
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I don't see how the different genre elements have anything to do with how the camera is controlled. However the design doc is written up, traversal is done like in most 3D platformers -- jumping and running. And no matter how you rationalize the decision, the camera has been a stumbling block for most critics. If it doesn't work, it doesn't work.