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Game Innovation by the Bedroom Coder

scriptedfun writes "The BBC reports on how bedroom coders might regain their place in the game development world by providing the industry 'an injection of imagination.' Microsoft's XNA Game Studio Express (covered previously on Slashdot) is given a special mention, but the article points out that 'the concept behind XNA is nothing new,' citing Sony's Net Yaroze as another example. With user-generated content fueling innovation in many aspects of technology, current initiatives by the major players to provide easy access to game development tools may just redefine the face of next-gen gaming. Peter Molyneux, creator of Populous, says: 'It's 100% down to the passion that people have, and the ability to perhaps bring in other people, maybe from all around the world on the internet, and create something.'"

3 of 47 comments (clear)

  1. Bedroom programmers? by brkello · · Score: 3, Funny

    I don't really know if anyone other than my girl friend would want to play the games I come up with in my bedroom. It is generally designed for 1-2 players (theoretically it could be more, but that might destroy multiplayer in general, making it single player for awhile). The best part is, everyone wins and you get some good exercise in as well.

    --
    Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
  2. Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    After all, Coders need SOMETHING worthwhile to stake claim to in the bedroom.

  3. Clever by skrugen · · Score: 2, Funny

    From the XNA FAQ:

    Q: What does XNA stand for?
    A: XNA's Not Acronymed