The Man Who Made Tetris
rossgneumann writes Life gets pretty chill after creating 'Tetris' and escaping the KGB. A quick web search for "Alexey Pajitnov" brings up pages of articles and interviews that fixate only on his seminal creation—a work that remains, far and away, the best selling video game of all time. But clearly, there's more to the man than just Tetris. Meeting Pajitnov himself led me to wonder about, well, everything else. What was the Tetris-less life of Alexey Pajitnov?
This documentary about Tetris is fascinating
Well escaping the KGB laid the foundation, and Tetris put most the of the bricks in place, but I spent the rest of my life looking for that one missing piece.
God spoke to me
explains a lot.
A sad life you lead, twisting anything into some weird attack on your "enemies".
There is a classic Russian game with similar pieces where you lay them into a box and try to make them fit. Alexey implemented a refined version of this game.
So really.. he didn't invent it as much as refine it.
Sort of like this, but with wood pieces. Very old:
http://i00.i.aliimg.com/wsphoto/v0/1697507318_1/Wood-intelligence-font-b-game-b-font-toy-Russian-font-b-Tetris-b-font-tile-matching.jpg
Yeah, but I love the way he spelled Romney as Rmoney.
For those who cannot afford to purchase a video game console but still want to play games, a computer or a mobile device is usually sufficient.
Wow.
I'm not sure we should be glorifying someone who claims that the existence of free software destroys the market.
that project before someone had the bright idea of running the numbers on the project only to realize "Oh, we're not going to make any money on this title" and subsequently canned it. Oops.
dizirehberi.org