Afleveringen
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Shawn Hargreaves talks about the Allegro game programming library and the community that sprung up around it inthe late 1990s. We talk about what happens when your hobby project accidentally turns into something with a lifeof its own, the inexplicable popularity of games involving the murder of Barney the Dinosaur, and the vital roleof accessible tooling in providing a path to learning.
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Leonard Richardson talks about a number of free and open-source games he made, as well as his time running agoofy BBS as a kid. We discuss the experience of having dozens of strangers create their own riffs of a game hetossed together in a couple of days, writing interactive fiction as a stepping stone to writing non-interactivefiction, and Nethack code patches as a form of fanfiction.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Jonah Davidson talks about his time as part of the rpg2knet RPG Maker community. We talkabout the desire to push the limits of the tool's strange constraints, the rite of passageof dealing with terrible translations, and how a community can spend a lot of effort tryingto emulate the games it loves, only to slowly discover that the games that break out arethe ones that are nothing like them.
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My childhood best friend Roman Banias talks about the games he made for fun as a youngchild. We discuss the magic and wonder of type-in programming books, the home computeras a toy, the act of creation as a natural extension of childhood play, and the AlienZit Cinematic Universe.
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Phil Salvador of The Obscuritory talks about his tenure as an administrator of the MarioFan Games Galaxy. We discuss the driving energy behind goofy joke games, the fragilenature of early internet communities, the interconnected nature of fan sites, and Waligie,a community icon born from a random poster's terrible spelling.
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Kirk Israel talks about JoustPong, a game he has made and remade many times over the years.We dive into the homebrew community surrounding the Atari 2600 in the early 2000s, the strainof obsessive assembly coding on relationships, and the challenge of finding a supportive community.