| COMP 310 
		 Fall 2012
 | Final Project 
		Specifications and Requirements | 
	
		|          | 
Where in the World is Willy?
Premise:
Willy has been stolen and you and your team must comb the 
world to find clues to the nefarious group that stole Willy and to Willy’s 
hidden location.
Description
	- Loosely based on the game “Where 
	in the World is Carmen San Diego?”
	
		- Adherence to the rules and game play of the original game is NOT 
		required!
 
- Teams of players compete to gather 
	clues and make guesses in an atttempts advance in a quest for more clues 
	which eventually lead to the location of the Willy.
		- Winner is first team to locate Willy.
 
- Clues are “virtually” placed in real locations around the globe.
- Real geolocation data and services, e.g. NASA WorldWind, are used in 
	conjunction with and interacting with the game application.
- Game consists of multiple client implementations that connect to a 
	central game server and possibly amongst themselves as well.
- Team members can communicate and share information.
 
Specifications
Requirements
	- Each development team will deliver
		- One client implementation
- One game server implementation
- One sample "puzzle".
- Full documentation
			- Full UML diagrams in project source
- Full Javadocs in HTML form in project source
- Text document describing how to use the client and game server
- Tool tips on all components on GUI.
 
 
-  10% of the final project grade will be a single class-wide score 
	based on the percentage of development teams that deliver operational client 
	and game servers.
 
Due Dates
	- See main class schedule for official times and dates.
- 2 Delivery Milestones:   One mid-process milestone and one 
	final delivery
- Full functionality required by Comp310 final exam time on Dec. 11, 2012.
- Scheduled Comp310 final exam period will be used as a demo/game play 
	time.
- Final deliverables must be submitted by the end of  the exam period 
	on Dec. 12.   
 
Reference Links
Not all the material below may be required!
 
 
© 2012 by Stephen Wong