Jump to content

Chris Hecker: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Reverted edits by 216.254.19.237 to last version by Sionus (HG)
Undid revision 248720623 by Sionus (talk) - Hecker Effect is unsubstaniated
Line 20: Line 20:
At the 2008 Game Developer Conference, Chris received the first ever "Duct tape" award as a joke from [[Eric Zimmerman]] during the developer's rant session.
At the 2008 Game Developer Conference, Chris received the first ever "Duct tape" award as a joke from [[Eric Zimmerman]] during the developer's rant session.


==The Hecker Effect==

In 2008, based on an excerpted quotation, a series of unsubstantiated but widely circulated forum postings [http://forum.spore.com/jforum/posts/list/8555.page] attempted to blame Hecker for many of [[Spore]]'s shortcomings. This has lead to a recent social phenomena.

Many on Spore message forums started to call the removal of large amounts of previously displayed content prior to the release of any highly anticipated game The Hecker Effect, the term has spread to many other forums since. The term is applied mostly to the removal of content discussed by developers and programmers and/or displayed as seemingly functional content during events such as E3 or in gameplay trailers.

The term is now applied retroactively to games Chris Hecker had no involvement with, such as [[Lionhead Studios]]' highly anticipated games "[[Fable (video game)|Fable]]" and "[[Black & White 2]]", which bloggers and forum regulars often now label as "Heckered."

Possible Origins of the Term: [http://forum.spore.com/jforum/posts/list/5132.page], [http://www.gamefaqs.com/boards/genmessage.php?board=926714&topic=46010789]





Revision as of 23:58, 30 October 2008

Christopher Bryan Hecker is a programmer and commentator associated with independent video games.

Biography

Hecker was a student at Parsons in New York City, studying the fine arts towards work as an illustrator. An article in Byte Magazine sold him on programming and he dropped out of school to begin work on graphics and games.

Hecker worked at Microsoft for three years, where he lead the development of WinG for the Windows operating system and wrote the rendering engine for the real-time globe display in Encarta World Atlas. He left the company in the early 1990s to start Definition 6, an Oakland, California based games and computer graphics consulting company that pushed the OpenGL standard for graphics display. The company produced a tech demo[1] but did not ship a commercial title.

Hecker sits on the advisory board for the Game Developers Conference. For many years he was Editor-At-Large of Game Developer Magazine. He uses both of these platforms to lobby for the development of an independent games movement. Lamenting the lack of innovation in gameplay, Hecker has pushed for alternative markets and models for small-scale video game production.

In 2002, with a few of his friends (largely Looking Glass Studios veterans), Hecker co-founded the successful Indie Game Jam.

Hecker spent many years working independently on a game based on the sport of rock climbing that was never completed. In 2004, he took a job with Maxis, working with Will Wright on Spore.

In 2006, Hecker was awarded the Community Contribution award at the Game Developers Choice Awards at the 2006 Game Developer Conference.

The Wii Remark

At the 2007 Game Developers Conference, Chris delivered a controversial anti-Nintendo rant, referring to their Wii game console as a "piece of shit" in reference to Wii's low computational power in comparison to competing consoles.[2] Widely reported was his comment that the Wii was merely "two GameCubes stuck together with duct tape". He later issued a public apology, saying his earlier speech was "[not] thought provoking, just inflammatory" and that "it's obvious that everybody at Nintendo is passionate at making games."[3]. At the 2008 Game Developer Conference, Chris received the first ever "Duct tape" award as a joke from Eric Zimmerman during the developer's rant session.



Chris Hecker's web page