Tag: games
QUT Creative Enterprise Australia launches Australia’s first creative tech accelerator
CEA’s Collider Accelerator is the latest program to be launched with support from Advance Queensland, which is investing more than $400-million to position Queensland as a hub of innovation and growth.
The history of graphics in game design [VIDEO]
This is part one of a five part series that tracks the history of graphics in video games.
If you're creating a game or, just...
How do you create new ideas? Play this game. Seriously [VIDEO]
If you're feeling a bit stifled or restricted in your thinking, then you have to watch this video.
You see, Shimpei Takahashi always wanted to...
How do you get from an idea to a product through to commercialisation? [VIDEO]
It's a question that every entrepreneurs has to tackle.
In this video, game designer Jordan Weisman explains how he thinks through an idea, and finds...
Kids get kick from iPhone app’s virtual soccer ball [Australian Innovation]
Some creative Australians have tossed a virtual soccer ball into the ever-expanding universe of iPhone apps. And that ball is enjoying a rather big bounce. The ball is the star of Upsies, an "augmented reality" game developed by Blind Mice Studios and Protein One.
Kids get kick from iPhone app's virtual soccer ball [Australian Innovation]
Some creative Australians have tossed a virtual soccer ball into the ever-expanding universe of iPhone apps. And that ball is enjoying a rather big bounce. The ball is the star of Upsies, an "augmented reality" game developed by Blind Mice Studios and Protein One.
Super Mario gets some stop motion madness treatment
Mario must be getting a bit long in the tooth these days considering that he's been head butting bricks and chasing mushrooms for more than two decades. In that time he's experienced a number of transformations, from games character to (not so successful) film star. Well, now he's been transmogrified into a physical presence once again with the help of some modern stop motion trickery.
Take this job and… clock it
Jarrad Woods, a video game developer for Canberra-based studio 2K Australia, notified his employers of his decision to quit by creating a Flash game for them to play.