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October 15, 2007

Will Wright Discsusses His Approach To Game Design at TED

Game designer Will Wright discussed his upcoming game Spore at TED this year. What particularly impresses me about his talk is his emphasis on the importance of building user empathy in a game which is a hallmark of "design thinking." Of course, Wright was truly a pioneer in this concept long before it became Avant-garde with SimCity and perhaps culminating most recently with The Sims. The role of empathy when designing user experiences is a crucial one. Sid Meier is another lgend that has continued to push the limits.

In his TED session, Wright cites many on interests such as astronomy, science fiction and astrobiology as having a major influence on the development of the game. Since I share many of these similar interests, I'm clearly looking very forward to this game and it might ultimately lead to an upgrade of my home computer. It's funny how interesting games have always played a catalyst in my decision to upgrade my computer. I can tell you exactly when the last time I upgraded my computer -- it coincided with the release of Half Life 2.

Be sure to check out this video in which Wright, soon to be awarded a Fellow of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) this month, comments:

Basically the reason is that I make toys like this is because I think that if there's one difference I can possibly make in the world, that I would choose to make, it's that I would like to give people a little bit better calibration on long-term thinking because I think that most of the problems world is faced with now is the result of short term thinking and the fact that it's so hard for us to think fifty years, one hundred, years one thousand years out.

I'm at Adobe MAX in Barcelona

dali5.jpg

Two weeks back I was in Chicago for MAX North America where we announced Beta 2 of Adobe AIR. This week I'm in Barcelona attending the Adobe MAX 2007 conference where I'm enjoying the chance to meet with various Adobe customers from through out the region. Though this is almost entirely a work trip, I did have the chance to enjoy some amazing seafood paella, see some of the Roman ruins and get lost in Salvador Dali's imagination. The image to the right is Dali's last painting from 1982 titled "Warrior".