logo
Scot raising funds for new video game after ‘GTA Paisley' viral success

Scot raising funds for new video game after ‘GTA Paisley' viral success

STV News13-05-2025

A Renfrewshire man is seeking funds to develop a new video game after going viral on social media with a showcase of his Grand Theft Auto (GTA)-like project based on Paisley.
Richard Gellatly has turned to the crowdfunding platform Kickstarter for his latest venture after the response to his last video 'exploded' on social media.
Originally posted by his partner on TikTok, it gathered almost 400,000 views on the platform.
'The amount of people showing interest in making this happen made the choice obvious,' explained the 34-year-old graphic designer from Paisley.
'With this idea being quite a varied and dense one, it would take many years to make without funding, and with funding it would take many less.' Bovine Richard wants to make sure his project is as authentic and as detailed as possible.
Bovine, Richard's professional pseudonym, is looking to crowdfund £12,000 that would enable him to spend more time working on the game and properly delve into things like developing the game's code, characters and story.
The Crystal Garden is to be a mystery game that players progress through via puzzles and character interactions.
The latest trailer shows the streets of Paisley shrouded in darkness on a wet night, with the game's description teasing a touch of the supernatural.
While the Crystal Garden represents Bovine's maiden video game project, he hopes to rely on his rich experience in graphic design, with work for large music festivals such as TRNSMT and Terminal V on his resume.
And although he admits that 'the internet liking your idea poses dangers of inflating one's ego beyond reality', he is trying to stay humble and realistic about his latest project. Bovine The latest trailer shows the streets of Paisley shrouded in darkness on a wet night, with the game's description teasing a touch of the supernatural.
He added: 'I'm confident I can make something engaging that'll look good and resonate with people who know the area.'
'The player should feel relaxed and not like they are experiencing a modernity overdose – it'll be quite cosy and allow you to go at whatever pace you like.'
Bovine hopes the campaign's success will allow him to make a game enjoyed by many, one that could turn into a 'series of Paisley games'.
But he says a potential lack of funding won't stop him either.
'I'll keep working on it, but just at a slower rate, and it will not be the same end product,' he said.
'But I enjoy working on it far too much to just stop, regardless of it being funded or not.'
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Katie Price no show at court over bankruptcy-related debts
Katie Price no show at court over bankruptcy-related debts

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Katie Price no show at court over bankruptcy-related debts

Katie Price has failed to show up in court to find out if more of her income will go directly towards paying off money owed under her two former glamour model from Sussex was declared bankrupt in November 2019 and again in March last year, and the bankruptcies have since been the mother-of-five, who did not attend the hearing in London on Friday and was not represented, still owes money as a result and had previously reached a voluntary agreement over her August Ms Price was warned by a judge about her non-attendance, after she was arrested for failing to show up for a previous hearing on the matter in July. Barrister Darragh Connell, representing trustees, told the specialist court she has not paid the arranged £12,500 a Connell asked Insolvency and Companies Court Judge Sebastian Prentis to make an income payments order, which means money would go from any salary towards Price's outstanding order relates to 10 the judge asked for more evidence to be provided to the court about Price's "reasonable domestic needs".Last August, a judge ruled that Price's income from social media platform TikTok be suspended as part of efforts to pay off her in February last year, a judge at a specialist bankruptcy court ordered that she must pay 40% of her monthly income from the adult entertainment website OnlyFans until February next hearing will take place later in the year, on a date to be confirmed

Love Island casting comes under fire AGAIN after it's revealed star had TikTok account where he ‘secretly films women'
Love Island casting comes under fire AGAIN after it's revealed star had TikTok account where he ‘secretly films women'

Scottish Sun

time25 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Love Island casting comes under fire AGAIN after it's revealed star had TikTok account where he ‘secretly films women'

He insisted he's a good, normal guy after being quizzed by cops over a machete attack. VILLA BAD BOY Love Island casting comes under fire AGAIN after it's revealed star had TikTok account where he 'secretly films women' AXED Love Island hunk Kyle Ashman took part in 'misogynistic' videos with a pal where they secretly filmed women. The lad was struck from the dating show line-up earlier this week after it was revealed that he had been held and questioned by police over a machete attack at a wake. Advertisement 3 Kyle was axed from the show earlier this week Credit: Instagram Now it has been revealed that he had a joint TikTok and YouTube page with a friend called Fin Musker. Whilst the joint pages have been wiped of content, a source has told The Sun that the videos involved them 'picking up girls and filming them without knowledge'. The source added that the videos 'displayed misogynistic behaviour towards women'. Some content still online shows Fin and Kyle out on the town, kissing women and speaking to them in bars. Advertisement When approached about the videos, Kyle did not wish to comment. It raises further question marks about ITV's vetting process for its reality shows. Earlier this week Kyle was sent packing from Majorca after The Sun alerted show bosses that he had been arrested on suspicion of a machete attack and was only cleared by police last month - meaning he would've been in discussion with authorities whilst auditioning for Love Island. ITV chiefs sent him home from Majorca, plunging the show into chaos ahead of Monday's launch. Advertisement A source said: 'All of the online content had been cleared so may not have come up on surface level checks, but for this kind of show far deeper trawls should be in place. 'ITV has steered clear of OnlyFans stars in the past and Kyle's link to one - particularly taking part in joint content of a misogynistic nature - is surely not in keeping with Love Island being a family show.' Love Island's Kyle Ashman reveals he wants show return as Casa Amor hunk after being axed over machete attack on dad ITV declined to comment. Ashman, 23, was one of two quizzed over a brutal machete attack at a wake in Stafford in February but was released with no further action. Advertisement Sources said the channel was unaware of the incident and he was not flagged as part of contestant checks. The victim, 38, nearly lost his arm. He was rushed to hospital for emergency treatment and kept in for around two weeks. Another mourner was glassed, one struck with a metal pole, and two people run over by a car during the 15 minutes of terror at a social club. Ashman, who lives in the town, was one of two men to be nicked on suspicion of affray then bailed. Advertisement Police confirmed that after the matter had been investigated the pair were released with no further action only last month. Speaking after he was axed from the show, he said: "I'm not a bad guy, honestly. I'm a normal guy from a normal place. An opportunity arose to find love and I grabbed it with both hands, and it's been taken away from me. "I've seen the support pages and, who knows, maybe I'll get the chance to go on Casa Amor or as a bombshell, go back in and show you who I really am. Show you I'm not a bad guy. We'll see." 3 He was quizzed by cops over a machete attack that happened in February Credit: Instagram/@kyleashmantr Advertisement 3 He was released without charge and insists he's a normal guy Credit: Instagram

Addison Rae: Addison review – 2025's most refreshing star revels in pop's shallow pleasures
Addison Rae: Addison review – 2025's most refreshing star revels in pop's shallow pleasures

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Addison Rae: Addison review – 2025's most refreshing star revels in pop's shallow pleasures

When Madonna came to the height of her powers in the late 90s and early 00s, it felt as though she had perfected a new mode of pop stardom, making icy, complex and uncannily incisive records such as Ray of Light and Confessions on a Dance Floor. Those albums are powered by a gripping interplay between detachment and intensity; they sound, to me, like attempts to make pop albums without any sense of ego. As if she's saying: this isn't a Madonna record, it's a pop record. Addison Rae's exceptional debut album reminds me of that unimpeachable run of Madonna records, understanding that supreme confidence and exceptional taste can sell even the most unusual album. It's both familiar – Rae is an artist who unapologetically lives and dies by her references – and totally bold: I get the sense that she is less trying to say 'this is who I am' as much as 'this is what pop should be'. Rae's vision of pop is formally traditionalist – she loves big choruses, euphoric key changes, huge builds – but undeniably influenced by her past life as an inhabitant of content-creation HQ Hype House, after her dance videos made her one of the most-followed people on TikTok. The 24-year-old sees no cognitive dissonance in putting together seemingly mismatched aesthetic or emotional sensibilities, a quality that, to me, suggests supreme comfort with the practically dadaist experience of scrolling TikTok's For You page. Winsome opener New York explores frenetic Jersey club; on Headphones On, a warm-and-fuzzy 90s-style R&B track, she casually tosses off the lyric 'wish my mom and dad could've been in love' as if it was an intrusive thought she just had to let out. Although Addison covers a lot of ground musically, every song also sounds uncannily like it came out of the indie-electronica boom of the early 2010s; High Fashion, arguably the best song here, is a pitch-perfect throwback to early James Blake and second-album Mount Kimbie; Diet Pepsi is Lana Del Rey by way of Neon Indian. The record's remarkable coherence can be chalked up to the fact that Rae worked with the same writer-producer duo, Elvira Anderfjärd and Luka Kloser, on every song – a rare feat for a major-label pop debut, made rarer by the fact that big-budget pop records made exclusively by women are practically nonexistent. But a quick scan of Anderfjärd and Kloser's credits suggests that Rae is in the driver's seat here; neither of them has ever made a song as laconically pretty as the EDM-scented Summer Forever, or as girlishly menacing as FameIs a Gun. If Addison has a mission statement, it's on the latter: 'Tell me who I am – do I provoke you with my tone of innocence?' she asks at its outset. 'Don't ask too many questions, that is my one suggestion.' It's an invitation to take Rae's music at face value – there's no self-conscious dip into wilful silliness or laborious camp. Most of the time, Rae is stringing together vague abstractions in a way that shuns overinterpretation, like when she sings: 'No matter what I try to do / In times like these, it's how it has to be', or returns to the phrase 'Life's no fun through clear waters'. Addison arrives at a fortuitous time: Rae resists the 2020s impulse to intellectualise every pop album and is unencumbered by ham-fisted concepts, Easter eggs or ultra-prescriptive 'lore' that tells listeners what to think. Its casually incisive tone suggests Rae might be a great pop flâneuse in the vein of Madonna or Janet Jackson, drifting through the scene with alluring ease and a gimlet eye. But she'd probably tell me I'm overthinking it.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store