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Tim Schafer

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Tim Schafer
OccupationGame designer
SpouseRachael Schafer

Tim Schafer (born July 26, 1967) is an American computer game designer. He founded Double Fine Productions in January 2000, having spent over a decade at LucasArts.

Most recently, Schafer designed a game for the Xbox, PS2, and PC called Psychonauts. Schafer is best known in the video game industry for his story-telling and comedy writing abilities.

Career

After graduating from UC Berkeley with a computer science major in 1989, Tim Schafer went to work at George Lucas' game production company LucasArts (then called LucasFilm Games and located at Skywalker Ranch).

After play testing the Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade action game and assisting with the NES version of Maniac Mansion, Schafer was assigned as a writer and programmer to the production of a pirate-themed adventure game The Secret of Monkey Island.

The Secret of Monkey Island became one of the most acclaimed games of its kind. According to series creator Ron Gilbert, Schafer and fellow writer-programmer Dave Grossman were responsible for about two thirds of the game's dialogs. [1] Monkey Island is noted for its humorous story, though was originally conceived as having a more serious tone; Schafer and Grossman wrote much humorous placeholder dialog, which persuaded Gilbert to turn it into a comedy. The same team created the sequel, Monkey Island II: LeChuck's Revenge.

Schafer's first lead role was co-designer (with Dave Grossman) of Day of the Tentacle, a time-travel comedy adventure loosely based on Maniac Mansion. 1995 saw the release of Schafer's first solo project, the biker adventure Full Throttle. He went on to design the highly acclaimed Grim Fandango, a noir adventure game set in the Aztec afterlife featuring characters similar to the papier-mâché skeleton decorations from the Mexican holiday Dia De Los Muertos. Grim Fandango won many awards, most notably GameSpot's PC Game of the Year award of 1998.

File:Grim fandango screenshot.jpg
A scene from the game Grim Fandango

Following its release, Schafer did some conceptual work on an unannounced Playstation 2 action/adventure game. However, it never entered production, as Tim Schafer left LucasArts in January 2000 to found his own game production company, Double Fine Productions, where he created the platform game Psychonauts.

Psychonauts won the Game Critics Award for Best Original Game at the E3 trade show of 2002, where the press first previewed it[1]. In 2005, an hour-long episode of Icons on the G4 Network documented the last week of production of the game. (Original airdate: April 28, 2005).

At the 2006 Game Developers Choice Awards, Tim Schafer and Erik Wolpaw won the award for Best Writing for Psychonauts. Tim Schafer and Double Fine producer Caroline Esmurdoc also won the award for Best New Studio. In October 2006, Tim Schafer received a BAFTA videogame Best Screenplay award for Psychonauts.

In a message posted on his company blog on June 13, 2006[2], Schafer rallied fans to get Psychonauts added to Microsoft's list of Xbox 360-compatible Xbox games. The e-mail campaign headlined on several video game news sites. One of the Microsoft employees working on the Xbox 360's backwards compatibility code soon after posted on the IGN Insider forum that "rest assured, we are working on Psychonauts" though gave no indication when the software emulation would be finished. Psychonauts was added to the Xbox 360's backwards compatibility list on December 12th, 2006.

Future

On September 8, 2006 it was announced that Double Fine had entered into a publishing agreement with Vivendi Games for an as yet unnamed title. The game will be a "brand new creation" and will be published under Vivendi Games' Sierra Entertainment label.[2]

Gameography

References

  1. ^ "The Secret of Creating Monkey Island - An Interview With Ron Gilbert". LucasFilm Adventurer vol. 1, number 1 (online transcript). 1990. Retrieved 2006-12-24.
  2. ^ "Vivendi Games Partners With Double Fine Productions". Vivendi Games. 2006-09-07. Retrieved 2006-12-24.

External links

Interviews