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MODDING: - Modding since 2003 including Quake, Q2, HL, HL2. Singleplayer mapping, character skins and level textures - 3D Modeling since 2003 including Lightworks, 3ds max, Blender, mostly organic (character/vegetation) modeling and furniture - Photoshop experience since 2003 and still use it every day in my work - ModDB activity since 2006 PROGRAMMING: - C basics (Visual basic, various applications from mIRC scripts to algorithmic architecture, including some simple HL2 code editing) - python basics including Ubuntu scripting and Blender GE scripts (mouseaim, dynamic WoW-style camera, turn-based combat, etc) MUSIC: - playing and performing piano/keyboards, guitar and drums - digital music composing using e.g. Guitar Pro, Fruity Loops GAME PROTOTYPES BY ME (unreleased): - 3D Lolo-type puzzle game with horror theme - 3D Co-op RPG with turn-based combat on BGE OTHER LIFE: - Student of architecture since 2007 - Architect works since 2011 - Beautiful baby girl and wife :)

RSS Reviews
2

Concussion Boxing

Game review
10

SuperTuxKart

Game review

A triumph of community-based and non-commercial game development!

10

Blender Game Engine

Engine review

I haven't got much experience with different game engines but I imagine BGE is pretty hard to beat if one isn't going for the very best (commercial level) graphics. On the other hand with dynamic lighting, normal maps, video textures available in BGE I haven't thought of anything that I couldn't have.

One HAS to love the BGE workflow of being able to model, animate and script the game content as you go without exporting and importing all the time and hunting and fixing the annoying small problems and bugs that usually originate when different software interact.

I doubt anyone who says BGE is hard to learn or not user friendly. Traditionally one has to learn 1 game engine, 1 modeling/animation tool, a level editor and then find out how they interact. BGE has got it all and all the pieces are following the same logic in UI and keyboard shortcuts. The data is all there, at once.

And it's free. The GPL licence makes it very hard to sell but I suppose one could use it for game alphas (models, animations and environments can be easily exported if you want to go commercial and invest on a platform) or try the donation-based funding. After all, most of the effort is put (AI heavy genres aside) into modeling, animating, textures, sounds and level design, that is perfectly re-usable as they are.

In my opinion for the honest indie projects BGE should be among the top choices. But perhaps many people think they must learn to use the tools of the gaming industry because that's where they want to work in the future. Of course they have to be illegally downloaded or bought at ridiculous prices.