Resources
THE GAME DEVELOPERS CONFERENCE:
Find great research on Visual Arts
Tracks, Audio Tracks, Game Design Tracks, Production Tracks Business &
Legal Tracks, Programming Tracks
go to the Archives
http://www.gdconf.com
Game Studies: the international journal of
computer game research
Digital Games Research Association
http://www.digra.org/
What is DiGRA?
Digital Games Research Association (DiGRA) is a non-profit, international
association of academics and practitioners whose work focuses on digital games
and associated activities, currently under preparation. Focus technologies of
the association include (but are not restricted to) existing types of computer
and video games, online games, arcade games, games on handheld and mobile
devices and games delivered through digital television or other forms of
interactive technologies.
Goals and Functions
The association aims to encourage high-level digital games
relevant research and to promote the dissemination of work by its members
through research, development, commercial, practitioner and policy communities,
networks and organisations. This it seeks to achieve with
· an annual conference (call for conference proposals forthcoming at www.gamesconference.org)
· an association website (forthcoming at www.digra.org)
· a series of association publications on current digital games research.
DiGRA sees these as vital steps in encouraging dialogues between gaming relevant agencies and encouraging the quality of digital games knowledge, research and collaboration.
Rensselaer Folsom
http://gamedev.coderanger.net/
GAMING SITES:
Gamesutra
http://www.gamasutra.com/
Shockwave
games:
www.shockwave.com
Game Programming, News, Directories, Jobs, Game
Dictionary:
http://www.gamedev.net/
HISTORY:
Joystick Nation by J. C. Herz
In a scant fifteen years, video- and computer games have become a
multibillion-dollar global industry's a fixture in malls, laundromats, movie
theaters, living rooms, and offices around the world's sucking up leisure time
and disposable income at a phenomenal pace. They have shaped the minds of a
whole generation who spent countless after-school hours, joystick in hand, heart
pounding, sweating through the latest chunk of thumb candy to come out of
Now J. C. Herz, author of Surfing
on the Internet (and videogame veteran), brings us the first
popular history and critique of electronic entertainment, from its genesis as
primitive blips in the labs of Cold War computer programmers to the studios
where networked 3-D theme parks are created. Tracing this neon branch of the
computer industry from a small cadre of inspired nerds to an entertainment
behemoth that rivals
Written with an arcade maven's passion and a cultural
scholar's insight, Joystick Nation
is a popular culture odyssey that will fascinate media junkies, technoculture
insiders, and anyone who pines for their old Atari.
WAR GAMES:
> THE PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT OF WAR: PTSD
> Participating in combat often has debilitating psychological
> effects. These effects are the result of being traumatized by combat
> experiences. This brochure provides an excellent general introduction
> to trauma and the specific psychological disorder that it causes,
> known as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
> http://www.ncptsd.org/facts/general/fs_effects.html
>
> This fact sheet on PTSD gives a more detailed explanation of the
> disorder, including how it is assessed and treated.
> http://www.ncptsd.org/facts/general/fs_what_is_ptsd.html
>
> Peacekeepers suffer as well as soldiers--as many as 20% of the
> Canadian peacekeepers have PTSD. Gen. Romeo Dallaire, the UN Commander
> in
> story. Includes interviews and other first person accounts.
> http://www.tv.cbc.ca/national/pgminfo/ptsd/wounds.html
>
> The US military is starting to integrate more information about combat
> stress into training. However, the main goal is keeping soldiers on
> the battlefield, and getting them back onto the battlefield if they
> suffer from PTSD while in action. It also focuses less on training
> soldiers to get help from trained professionals than from military
> superiors and "buddies."
> http://www.9-11peace.org/r2.php3?r=105
>
> A study of American Vietnam veterans indicates that members of the
> military from minority groups, such as Native Americans, tend to
> suffer from higher rates of PTSD than Caucasian military personnel.
> http://www.ncptsd.org/facts/veterans/fs_native_vets.html
>
> Soldiers are not the only ones who are traumatized by war; civilians
> who are not directly engaged in fighting are also at risk. This
> article briefly outlines the causes and effects of exposure to
> prolonged combat stress.
> http://www.ncptsd.org/facts/disasters/fs_civilians.html
Baudrillard, Jean. Simulations,
THE SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY
Theorist -Albert Bandura
http://www.criminology.fsu.edu/crimtheory/bandura.htm
GAME ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN :
Game Architecture and Design, by
Andrew Rollings, Dave Morris
Teaches design, architecture, and
management--the things programmers need to know before they can even begin
writing code! Provides hundreds of case studies to show what works and what
doesn't. Takes the reader through all the necessary game creation steps--from
seeing a game idea on paper to actually implementing that idea!
Game Design Perspectives (with CD-ROM) ?
checked it out, but not sure – no one great game design book out yet including
artistic bent – maybe we have to write one by Francois Dominic Laramee (Editor)
Game Design: Theory and
Practice (With CD-ROM)?same here
by Richard Rouse, Steve Ogden (Illustrator), Mark Louis Rybczyk
3ds max 7 for Windows:
Visual QuickStart Guide
by Michele Matossian
Animation with character
studio 3 by Michele Bousquet
there
are also on line tutorials that are great.
Flash Games Studio, Bhangal,
UPCOMING, NEW AND EXCITING:
AI
http://www.kurzweilai.net/news/frame.html?main=/news/news_single.html?id%3D965
Simulation and synthespians
(synthetic actors) and future issues)
MORE TO COME
MORE READINGS:
Trigger
Happy : Videogames and the Entertainment Revolution by Steven Poole
Videogames
first came on the market thirty years ago as a marginal technological curiosity.
Now they are virtually everywhere. Videogame sales have equaled movie sales.
They are played by more adults than children, and game design can even be
studied in college. Yet videogames are still often viewed as a minor form of
entertainment, at best shallow, or at worst harmful. Now, Steven Poole argues
that videogames are a nascent art for on track to supersede movies as the most
popular and innovative form of entertainment in the new century.
Game
Architecture and Design, by Andrew Rollings, Dave Morris
Teaches
design, architecture, and management--the things programmers need to know
before they can even begin writing code! Provides hundreds of case studies to
show what works and what doesn't. Takes the reader through all the necessary
game creation steps--from seeing a game idea on paper to actually implementing
that idea!
Game Over Press Start To Continue by David Sheff, Andy Eddy
The riveting story of Nintendo's conquest of the interactive entertainment industry offering true tales filled with cocky arrogance, confidence and international intrigue that rival any novel. Whether it is recounting the struggles over the game"Tetris," offering blow-by-blow narrative of Nintendo's bitter legal warfare or its see-saw competition with other companies for market leadership, Game Over is a masterful piece of business journalism and technical reportage-a book both cautionary and... read more
Baudrillard, Jean. Simulations, New York, Semiotext(e), Inc., Columbia University, 1983.
Anders, Peter. Envisioning Cyberspace, New York: McGraw Hill, 1998. pgs.99-110. “Special Issues in Designing CyberSpace”
Lunenfeld, Peter. Snap to Grid: A User's Guide to Digital Arts, Media, and Cultures, Boston, The MIT Press, 2000.
Kelly, Kevin & Adam Heilbrun. “Virtual Reality: An Interview with Jaron Lanier”, The Whole Earth Catalog. Cali.: 1993. Reality Check with Jaron Lanier, 1995.
Hollands, Robin. The Virtual Reality Homebrewer’s Handbook. West Suxxex, England:1996.
Laurel, Brenda. The Art of Human Computer Interface Design. New York: Addison Wesley,
1990.
Dodsworth, Clark Jr., Digital Illusion: Entertaining the Future with High Technology, New York, Addison-Wesley, 1998
Virilio, Paul. The Lost Dimension. New York, Semiotext(e), Inc., New York: Columbia University, 1991.
Stone, Allucquere, Rosanne. The War of Desire and Technology at the Close of the Mechanical Age. Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1995.
Benedict, Michael. Cyberspace: First Steps.Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1994.
Crary, Jonathan. Techniques of the
Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the Nineteenth Century. Mass,: MIT
Press, Cambridge, 1990.
Prisoner's Dilemma/John Von Neumann, Game
Theory and the Puzzle of the Bomb by William Poundstone
Spalter, Ann Morgan. The Computer in the Visual Arts. Addison Wesley Longman, Inc., 1999.
Morse, Margret. Virtualities: Television, Media Art, and Cyberculture
(Theories of Contemporary Culture) Indiana Univ Pr; ISBN: 0253211778
Malraux, André. “Museum Without Walls”. In The Voices of Silence. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1978.
Bender,
Damer, Bruce. Avatars!: Exploring and Building Virtual Worlds on the Internet. Peachpit Press, 1998.
Postman, Neil. Technolopy: The Surrender of Culture to Technology. New York: Vintage Books, 1993.
Ritchin, Fred. In Our Own Image. New York: Aperture, 1990.
Gombrich,
E.H. Art & Illusion: A Study in
the Psychology of Pictorial
Representation. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1960.
Boyer,
Christine, Cybercities, Labrynths of the Mind and the City –
Real and Virtual pgs 45-71.
Gibson, William. Neuromancer. New York: Ace Book, 1984.
Stephenson, Neal. Snow Crash, New York, Bantam Spectra, 1996.
Pimentel, Ken & Teixeira, Kevin. Virtual Reality: through the new looking glass. New York: Intel/Sindcrest/McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1993.
Kandinsky, Wassily. Concerning the Spiritual in Art. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1977.
Penley, Constance, Ross, Andrew eds., Technoculture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1991.
Ames, Andrea L.; Nadeau, David R.; and Moreland, John L.. VRML 2.0 Sourcebook. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1997.
Hartman, Jed; Wernecke, Josie; and Carrie, Rikk. The VRML Handbook : Building Moving Worlds on the Web. New York: Addison-Wesley Pub Co, 1996.
Roehl, Bernie; Couch, Justin; Reed-Ballreich, Cindy; Rohaly, Tim; and Brown, Geoff. Late Night VRML with Java. New York: Ziff-Davis Press, 1997.
Lyotard, Jean-Francois. “Can thought exist without a body?”. In The Inhuman. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 1991.
Jacobs, Karrie. “Robobabes: Why Girls Don’t Play Video Games”, in I.D. May/June, 1994.
Kantrowitz, Barbara. “Men, Women & Computers” in Newsweek, May 16, 1994, pp. 48-52.
Tannen, Deborah. “Gender Gap in Cyberspace” in Newsweek, May 16, 1994, p. 52-53.
Heidegger, Martin. "The Age of the World Picture". In: M. Heidegger, The Question ConcerningTechnology and Other Essays. New York: Harper & Row, 1977.
Kitchens, Susan A. The QuickTime VR Book : Creating Immersive Imaging on Your Desktop, Peachpit Pr; ISBN: 0201696843
De Goes, John,& Lampton, Christopher F.. Cutting-Edge 3d Game Programming With C++ , The Coriolis Group; ISBN: 1883577705
"Game Programming Gems" by Mark DeLoura, Editor
Written by more than 40 gifted game developers, "Game Programming Gems" compiles dozens of useful game-programming tips that'll let you do a lot more with 3-D graphics, no matter what your programming level. Containing sample Visual C/C++ code for OpenGL that'll run on both Windows and Linux, this text is chock-full of innovative graphics-programming techniques that'll help you write better games with cutting-edge special effects. You'll find new algorithms to do faster graphics processing, and discover techniques for adding a new level of realism to virtual worlds. Whether you already work in the gaming industry or would like to, this book provides a fascinating glimpse into the techniques that go into today's ultrarealistic video games. Read more
"JavaScript Bible, __Edition" by Danny Goodman