Henk Rogers
Henk Rogers | |
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File:Henk-Rogers.jpg | |
Occupation | Computer Gaming Specialist |
Website | [1] |
Henk Rogers is a video game designer and entrepreneur, best known for winning a license for the handheld and console versions of the computer game Tetris from the Russian Government organisation ELORG, beating Robert Maxwell's empire in the process.
Rogers was born in the Netherlands and lived in New York City from the age of eleven until graduating from Stuyvesant High School. He then studied computer science at the University of Hawaii.
During the late 1970s, he moved to Japan. In 1983 he established his own company, Bullet-Proof Software and then claims to have designed and developed The Black Onyx, as the first Japanese role-playing game. Of course, this claim (while substantiated in his company biography) is wholly refuted by Roger Dean's works timeline. [2] Roger Dean (artist) was the designer for Black Onyx, a game which was developed in 1994 (which came 8 years after Dragon Warrior, an intensely popular Japanese RPG series that came out in 1986).
Rogers discovered Tetris during a game show in Las Vegas in 1988. At the time, the game was being distributed in several countries under the color of a master license agreement which the original licensee had not honored. Rogers went to Moscow (without an invitation) to see if he could obtain rights to distribute the game. Two other companies were simultaneously bidding for the same rights. Rogers brought Nintendo on board and secured the exclusive rights to market Tetris on video game consoles. Nintendo successfully used this grant to squeeze its rival Atari out of the market, as Atari had sought to market Tetris based on the original (invalid) license.
During the negotiations in Moscow, Rogers also became friends with the game's Russian author Alexey Pajitnov. In 1990, he helped Pajitnov move to the United States and set up a new company, AnimaTek, to develop new computer graphic technologies.
In 1996, the rights for Tetris reverted to Pajitnov. Rogers moved from Japan to Hawaii, where he founded Blue Planet Software and a subsidiary company, the Tetris Company, exclusively to manage the intellectual property rights for Tetris.
Rogers founded Blue Lava Wireless in 2002 to develop mobile gaming software. The company was sold to Jamdat in 2005, along with the mobile game rights to Tetris.