Origins of Greater Good Games and Break Blocks

Origins of Greater Good Games and Break Blocks

Postby Xienen » December 2nd, 2013, 9:55 am

Lets jump into the way back machine for a second and start from the very beginning, just to make sure we don't miss anything. At 12 years old, after many years of playing games on the NES and SNES, I began to get curious about how video games were made. I had already been programming for a bit, so I researched a little and created a Pong clone! Ah, success! Well, not so much, because it was written in Visual Basic...and was a clone. So, after seeing Starcraft for the first time, I dug a little deeper and started learning DirectDraw and noticed that every tutorial out there was written in this alien language called C++. That's when I learned my first major programming lesson: friends don't let friends learn Visual Basic before a real programming language. The transition was frustratingly difficult, but I eventually wrapped my head around it. So, just getting started in real game development, I worked on a few projects with various people, but they never really got off the ground.

Soon after, I switched to OpenGL, learned the basics of 3D game development, and landed a contract job at 18 years of age for a now defunct company. After the contract ended, just before they shut down, I got a local job at another now defunct company, which knew even less about game development than the first company. After seeing these companies fail, I decided that I needed to get in the door at a more competent company, which meant I needed a degree. While in college, I couldn't help but start working on another little project of my own, which eventually became Break Blocks, but was then named Groove Blocks(and was being developed by like 4-8 people at any given time, none of which were musicians). Oddly enough, even though the game was hardly playable and didn't look professional at all, almost everyone working on that project used it as an example to get some form of a job in the game industry. I, of course, landed a job at a company that is now dead, but they at least seemed to know something about game development. Once they went kaput, I got another game development job, working on a Porno MMO, which is not exactly the highlight of my career, but it paid the bills for a few months. Oh, and big surprise, they are now defunct as well.

But, they gave me the big break I needed, inadvertently, because they took me to the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. There I met the guys here at Tripwire Interactive. I have been working at Tripwire for nearly 4 years now and I must say that these guys are awesome! But, I had a dream as a kid, which I have to pursue while my body can still handle the sleep deprivation. So, I've been working on Break Blocks instead of sleeping for over a year now.

At first, it was just me, but I was lucky enough to run across an excellent artist trying to get into the game industry. He quickly replaced all the old unprofessional art with assets much more fitting to the game. I then found a awesome musician who befriended me because he was a fan of Killing Floor, which I worked on at Tripwire. I can't possibly express how lucky I feel to have met these 2 talented people who are making Break Blocks a reality in their spare time. Not to mention that, through Tripwire, I've added a highly experienced sound guy to the team, and learned more about successful game development, business, and marketing than I ever would have on my own. How lucky can one guy get?

As for the idea for Greater Good Games and charitable game development, that story's a bit shorter. We knew that we'd need to create an entity to put our game out on the market upon completion, but one day I realized that regardless of how successful the game is, we just want to keep making games, not get rich. So, I proposed the idea of giving every bit of extra money we can to charity to my artist/partner, who was completely receptive to the idea. So, if Break Blocks sells well, we get to continue making games, charities will receive large contributions, and our customers will know that they helped make the world a better place by simply playing video games. Everyone Wins!

So, that's my story. I believe some people in my position, with the same horrible employment history, would say they "deserve" to be at a company as awesome as Tripwire and to have Greater Good Games be successful, but, personally, I don't believe that anyone deserves anything just due to hard work or perseverance; any good fortune in our lives is somehow derived from luck. Whether its being born into a first world country, being born into a supportive or financially stable family, or interviewing for a job at the right company at the right time to fill the position. We are all lucky and I believe, despite some minor hardships I've encountered in my life, I am one of the luckiest people on earth to be able to make games for a living!
Xienen
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