Have fun Here are several tutorials that give After Effects users that chunky, retro, 8-bit, posterized look, with or without plug-ins. Plus some 8-bit inspiration.
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Free motion desktop backgrounds. The first tutorial from Charles Yeager caught my eye today and then I thought, well why not expand on the  8-bit theme and give you all something really good today! Fingerprint attendance software. Combine several of the techniques explained here and have one amazing 8-bit Nintendo-style animation!
1. Quick Tip: Create an 8-bit Style in After Effects
This will get you started with the basics. AE Tuts+ and Charles Yeager bring you a two minute After Effects tutorial on creating the 8-bit look using Posterize, Mosaic, and Hue/Saturation. He shows how to save this as a preset to speed up your workflow.
2. Digieffects Damage | Artifact – 8 Bit Gaming Tutorial
This tutorial has disappeared from the interwebs but I’m leaving it in just in case it comes back. Apparently, something on the internet IS NOT there forever! 😉
I'm partial to Doom 3's title screen music. As two side notes, the main riff appears in Doom 2016's soundtrack, and the structure overall of the song (right down to the main riff again) is strikingly similar to Containment Breach by zYnthetic, which appears in Killing Floor.
Fairlight is an isometric projection arcade adventure video game developed by Bo Jangeborg and Jack Wilkes at The Edge and released in 1985.Developed in seven months, Jangeborg created the GRAX game engine using some prior code and components from his earlier project, graphics package The Artist.Wilkes contributed art assets towards the game, including enemy sprites and the title screen.
Feb 11, 2017 The Art of Video Game Title Screens NakeyJakey. Unsubscribe from NakeyJakey? The Art of Video Game Loading Screens - Duration: 9:27. NakeyJakey 1,727,324 views.
The Most Amazing Video Game Continue Screens. The continue countdown screen was introduced to arcades in the 80s. It was a simple and effective.
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Some of my favorite video game title screens of all time. Some of my favorite video game title screens of all time. Skip navigation Sign in. This video is unavailable.
Here’s an older tutorial by Brandon Smith and Digieffects, which he creates with Digieffects Damage. Create 8-bit style video with Damage’s Artifact plug-in in After Effects, Premiere Pro, Final Cut Pro 6/7, and Final Cut Pro X. Download a free demo of Damage.
3. After Effects Tutorial: Retro 8-Bit Video Game Title Screen
This one comes from Thinkmojo and is a bit more involved than the previous two. He goes over how to create a reflection, how to use the loopOut() expression to cycle the animation, and also how to create that 8-bit look with Mosaic and Posterize in After Effects.
4. How to Animate Retro Pixel Art in After Effects, 8-bit Style
Touch Screen Video Game
This one comes from Nick Morris at AE Tuts+. He explains the workflow for taking pixel art from ASEprite into Photoshop and then finally into an HD comp in After Effects.
5. Creating 8-Bit Animation
This is an interesting tutorial because the artist is singing while he works! He starts off by making a character with a unibrow in Photoshop and then takes it into After Effects to create the lipsync. He does this manually but I would suggest using a plug-in called MamoWorld Auto Lip-Sync, which allows you to create a mouth that automatically animates according to your voice recording.
Space Video Game Title Screens
Inspiration: 8 Bit Cinema: The Big Lebowski and Pulp Fiction
Inspiration: Retro 8 bit Video Game Title Screen
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Fine ArtFine ArtFine Art is a celebration of the work of video game artists, showcasing the best of both their professional and personal portfolios. If you’re in the business and have some art you’d like to share, get in touch!
Back before games had cinematic intros, and many of the biggest titles were still in arcades, the video game title screen was often one of the most important 'lures' for a customer.
Featuring big artwork and even bigger titles, it had to capture everything the game stood for. Everything it was about. Everything it was trying to sell to you, the consumer.
These days, of course, they're less important. They're usually just the things you end up on if you leave a controller idle, or are an obstacle you have to mash a button to get past in order to actually start playing.
Yet the art remains. And Please Press Start is doing a great job of cataloguing its more recent entrants, with an ever-growing archive of screens asking you, usually very politely, to please 'Press Start'.
[Please Press Start]
Video Game Title Screen Creator
Fine Art is a celebration of the work of video game artists. If you're in the business and have some concept, environment or character art you'd like to share, drop us a line!