Gaslamp Games

Gaslamp Games, Inc.
Private
Industry Interactive entertainment
Founded 27 January 2010
Headquarters Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Key people
David Baumgart (Co-Founder)
Dan Jacobsen (Co-Founder)
Nicholas Vining (Co-Founder)
Website gaslampgames.com

Gaslamp Games, Inc. is a small, independent software development company based in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada currently designing video games for the Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux operating systems.[1] Their first game, Dungeons of Dredmor, was released in 2011.

Staff

Nicholas Vining, Gaslamp's technical director, has been involved in the game industry since the age of sixteen, when he got his Linux gaming start working for Loki Software.[2] Since then, he has contributed to games developed by Piranha Games, 3000AD Inc., Destineer Studios, and TimeGate Studios. He has also written for Game Developer Magazine, and is listed as a contributor to the OpenGL Rendering API specification. He has also worked with prolific coder Ryan C. Gordon on various open source and Linux-related projects.[3]

David Baumgart, Gaslamp's art director, has previously worked as a contractor specialising in 2-D artwork for video games. His list of credited titles includes work for Niels Bauer Games, Hexwar Games, Data Spire, and Tactic Studios. He also created the logo for the FatELF project.[4]

Daniel Jacobsen, Gaslamp's CEO, co-founded the company while working on his undergraduate in physics at the University of Victoria, and their first release, Dungeons of Dredmor, was his first commercial video game project. In addition to programming and company management, he has also lectured with Nicholas Vining at the University of Victoria on game design, and contributes actively to Australian National University's SkyMapper project.[1]

Releases

Their first project, Dungeons of Dredmor, was released on 13 July 2011.[5][6] Dungeons of Dredmor is a Rogue-inspired dungeon crawler which embraces procedural content generation.[7] Gaslamp's second game, Clockwork Empires was released on Steam Early Access on August 15, 2014, and is currently in development for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X.[8]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.