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GameFest 2012 at Rensselaer Expands to a Regional Reach
More Than 40 Entries Designed By Students of
Rensselaer, Rochester Institute of Technology, and Champlain
College
Get ready for the biggest GameFest yet, as the annual
showcase of student-designed video games grows to include more
than 40 entries from students of the Rensselaer Games and
Simulation Arts and Sciences (GSAS) program, as well as
game design programs at Rochester Institute of
Technology and
Champlain College.
“This year's GameFest will feature both some of the most
polished, professional games and some of the most
thought-provoking games we've seen yet,” said Ben
Chang, associate professor of arts and co-director of the
GSAS program at Rensselaer. “Some of the new ideas and
technologies that we'll see include brain control
interfaces, Kinect games, real-time fluid simulations, and
games to teach programming to kids. There will be
games made by teams of half a dozen or more students and games
created by solo auteurs. We’ll see games that are epic in
scope and games that, like good poems, are short but pack a
great emotional punch.”
Symposium
Following the juried exhibition of video games, a symposium
will feature keynote Richard Vogel, the executive
producer of Star Wars: The Old Republic,
a production of LucasArts and BioWare/Electronic Arts,
according to
Lee Sheldon, associate professor in the Department of
Communication and Media and co-director of GSAS.
Vogel will then be joined for a panel discussion by Jennifer
O’Neal of Vicarious
Visions/Activision, Richard Rouse of Paranoid
Productions/UbiSoft, and Tobi Saulnier, founder of 1st Playable
Productions and a Rensselaer graduate.
The juried exhibition of student work, in combination with
speakers and panels headed by leading game designers and
scholars, is a glimpse into the future of video games and
simulation, and an opportunity for students to network with
prospective employers, and to size up one another’s work.
Student Game Demonstration and Competition
The games expo will be held Saturday, April 28, from
10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Alumni Sports and Recreation Center
(the Armory) on the Rensselaer campus.
As part of the expo, 40 games will compete for cash prizes
in an exhibition juried by Vicarious Visions, an Albany, N.Y.,
company founded by brothers Karthik Bala, RPI ’97, and Guha
Bala.
“Gamefest is a showcase of student innovation and creativity
in games and simulations, ranging from demonstrations of
cutting-edge graphics techniques, to educational games for
children in developing countries,” said Chang.
Entries include:
“Number Mission” (Maria
Montenegro) is an educational game that uses the Kinect to
teach young children about math and environmental
issues.
“Zineth” (Tom Astle, Jacob
Knipfing, Russell Honor, Tom Lanciani, Evan Gonzales, Dan
Spaulding, and Sylvia Forrest) is a strikingly original
retro-themed game that manages to encompass skating games, ’80s
zine culture, and cellphone addiction.
“The Hold” (Anton Hand, Adam
Liszkiewicz) mixes mind-bending, Escher-esque puzzle levels
with a heavy dose of psychological space and a twist ending
that you’ll have to play to experience. This project also
introduces an unusual approach to real-time lighting and
materials that may just revolutionize the way that small indie
teams tackle AAA-quality productions.
“The Gods are Dead” ( Dan Hawkins,
Beth Werbaneth, Beth Towns, Colin Neville, Rosa Tung) mines
Greek mythology to create a complex and irreverent 2
versus 2 multiplayer game.
“MindEscape” (Nick Steele, Andrew
“Wash” Uhmeyer, Michael Williams, Josh Zygman) is a
three-dimensional virtual environment game where one’s thoughts
– read through a NeuroSky Mindwave EEG headset – literally
control the game play. The game takes place in the mind of a
young boy who is escaping his harsh outside reality by
retreating to the world within his own head. The project’s
long-term goal is to help increase concentration and also to
promote a calm state of mind for anger management
techniques
“The Fall” (Kevin Todisco, Erin
McQuade) is a deceptively simple game that will leave you
breathless, and not just because it's a game entirely about
running down stairs.
“Flash Mob-ster” ( Phelan Lemieux,
Tyler Moylan, Kyle Johnsen, Brett Kaplan, Paul M. Kelly Jr. )
is a new twist on the music game genre that uses your own music
collection, has environments that react to sound, and, in a
feat of split coordination and rhythm, asks you to play two
completely different kinds of games simultaneously.
The Background
GameFest is hosted by the GSAS program at
Rensselaer. The GSAS program was launched in the fall of
2007 to provide comprehensive understanding of interactive
digital media, a balance of disciplinary competencies, and the
mastery of a self-defined set of interrelated disciplinary
challenges at the nation’s oldest technical institute. GSAS has
been named among the top 15 out of 150 undergraduate game
design programs in the United States and Canada, according to a
recent survey from the Princeton Review. The program graduated
its first full class in May 2011.
“GameFest is a collaboration between Rensselaer and local
game development companies, and brings leading game designers
and scholars to campus for the afternoon symposium,” Chang
said. “With the addition of RIT and Champlain, GameFest has a
wider impact and more effectively promotes the game development
community throughout the region.”
GameFest 2012 is sponsored by Vicarious Visions, as well
as 1st Playable
Productions, Agora Games, Harmonix, The Game Studio,
Games That Work, Rensselaer, and RIT.
For more information on GameFest, including the schedule of
events and registration for the symposium, visit the
GameFest page on the GSAS website.
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Published
April 25,
2012 |
Contact: Mary L. Martialay
Phone: (518) 276-2146
E-mail: martim12@rpi.edu |
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