Archive for August, 2009

The Blender GameKit: Introduction

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Categories: Game development

This post is part of series on my experience with the book The Blender GameKit. For more information, see the first post.

The introduction section of The Blender GameKit has three chapters: a quickstart, a theoretical introduction to 3D, and an overview of Blender’s interface. There are no instructions on installing Blender, but on my Windows machine, the installation process was standard and completely painless, so none are really necessary.

» Read the rest of this post.

The Blender GameKit: First impressions

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Categories: Game development

The Blender GameKit front coverToday, I received a review copy of the book The Blender GameKit, 2nd edition. I’m always keen to learn new skills and since I know nothing about Blender, this book could prove to be very interesting. For those of you who don’t know, Blender is a free, open source 3D content creation suite. The Blender GameKit is a game creator and engine and is an integrated part of Blender.

Unfortunately, it might take me quite some time before I’ve used the book enough to write a fair review about it, so I decided to do things somewhat differently. Over the course of the coming days/weeks, I will be blogging about my experience with The Blender GameKit while I work my way through it. If you don’t want to wait for that, you can order your own copy of the book at the Blender Store.

Let’s start with some first impressions.

» Read the rest of this post.

Indie Games Gone Bad

Friday, August 7th, 2009

Categories: Business

Today I received an e-mail from the Xbox LIVE Team, telling me - amongst other things - that Xbox LIVE Community Games will henceforth be known as Xbox LIVE Indie Games. I don’t actually get any Community/Indie Games on my Xbox, as my region doesn’t seem to have that feature, but let’s not dwell on that.

I believe Microsoft is doing serious indie game developers a disservice with this name change. A lot of the Community Games are poor quality games, developed by lowly skilled hobbyist. That’s not really a problem, as far as I’m concerned. However, by changing the name from Community Games to Indie Games, gamers will soon associate the term indie game with poor quality and that’s bad news.

Serious indie game developers are not just trying to make cool games, they are trying to run a business, and in business, audience perception counts. When gamers start to think that indie games are mostly bad, it will hurt the entire indie game market.


Bad Behavior has blocked 41 access attempts in the last 7 days.