Tuesday, 4 December 2012

CV



Daniel Elkins
CV
(this is not a real CV, it is for academic purposes)  

I have been interested in video games since I was young, and have grown up to become a passionate gamer, with an interested in every form of gaming, but a definite  love of science fiction games, such as halo and mass effect . I am creative, hardworking and punctual and feel am perfect for this job. I want to learn and experience new part of the industry to further my career.    

EDUCATION



2011- 2012
GCSE- the kings school
(now closed)
10 A-C GCSEs (including maths, English and science)
2012- 2014
Level 3 BETEC In creative
Media- at confetti institute of
Creative technologies  
Distinction
2014- 2016
FdSc in games Technology-
at confetti institute of
creative technologies  

Distinction
2016- 2017
BSC (hons) in media
Technology- at De Montfort University 

Distinction
  

JOBS & WORK EXPERIENCE


July 2011
Work experience- Allianz
Assistant inspector, helping to inspect and review the safety of engineering machines, e.g. forklifts, elevators, cranes   
July 2011
Work experience- Robert Shaw
primary  school
Primary school assistant, working in a year 1 class, helping to prepare lessons, take care of the children and keeping the place tidy.
  

ADDITIONAL SKILLS

·         Research - advanced
·         Team work - advanced
·         Presentations – experienced
·         Auto desk Maya - Advanced
·         Photoshop elements 10 – Advanced
·         Auto desk 3Ds- experienced

LANGUAGES-
English

OTHER EXPERIENCE

·         I have been playing games since a young age, my first console I truly remember being a dream cast.
·          I have grown up in a house where PCs are regularly being built, my father teaching me how to make one at an early age
·         I was a member of the cub scouts, when I was younger, only leaving when it closed down.
·         In secondary school I was a prefect and unofficial house captain.    

REFEREES

Confetti
De Montfort University
Allianz
Robert Shaw primary school 




Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Level desiger




Level designer


I have yet to decide what part of the games industry I want to be apart of, but one of the jobs that interested me is games designer, and especially level designing. Games designers are the people who decide what the game consist of and how it plays. They also often come up with the ideas behind the game. Games designer requires many skills; they must be creative, work as a team, manage the work and keep on deadlines. I am capable of all these things.

There are many jobs within games designing just as lead designer, games designer, map building, script writing, level editor, story board artist etc. But the one I’m interesting in is level designer. Designing a level is often done it a team, games are comprised of levels and so each team is given a part of the game to produce.

Level designers map out the level, adding the required detail of the environment, like buildings and plant life. It is up to them to decide how that level plays out, adding all the detail, including the interactive objects within that level. I feel I would enjoy this role, as I love being creative, and love adding little details that build up and make something unique. Most games now are 3D and so the levels are 3D meaning world editors must be combined with 3d modelling. I enjoy 3d model although at the moment I am not too good, I know I will be able to one day. I love building structures and planning environments and so level designing seems appropriate and something I would enjoy.  



Example of Level deisgner job.

Senior Level Designer

Job Title' Senior Level Designer
Job Category Game Design
Skills Required Level Designer
Location in the heart ofFrankfurt am Main , Germany
Job Description Requirements:
• Minimum 4 Years professional experience
• Excited, passionate and motivated
• Must work well in a team oriented environment
• Excellent organizational, communication, presentation and interpersonal skills
• Experienced and working knowledge of design tools, techniques and methodologies
• Ability to challenge assumptions and bring about innovative solutions
• Excellent written and spoken English
• Must be willing to relocate to Frankfurt, Germany

Preferences:
• Working knowledge of CryEngine Sandbox toolset
• At least 1 shipped AAA titles on PC, Xbox360 or PS3
• Experience in a senior position
• Strong communicator, able to easily present ideas and information to the team
• Understanding of game design theory, practice, pacing and mission flow
• Experience in using scripting tools including: AI, in-game interactive sequences, scenario design, etc.
• Experience in SCRUM

Responsibilities:
• Work with Lead Level Designer on level design and game play ideas.
• Execute level design production assignments Lead Level Designer and Creative Director in a timely fashion using the Crytek Sandbox Game Design Tool.
• Work on game concepts, gameplay mechanics, entity mechanics, and enemy design.
• Use the CryEngine Sandbox level editor to implement designs, layout levels, entity creation, gameplay lightning, script events and manipulate AI behaviors.
• Mentor and supervise less experienced designers to increase overall level design quality.
• Assist in design documentation and in-game dialogue writing.
• Coordinate with other studio groups including art and production to achieve project objectives.
• Provides guidance and assistance where required, and is willing to accept guidance and assistance when required.
• Shows a strong passion for making the highest quality state of the art games.
• Actively participate in team working on project by making recommendations on how to improve product quality as well as group productivity.
• Provide input to department project status meetings.
• Takes initiative and is willing to expand own horizon.
• Complete all tasks in a timely manner and to a consistent high quality standard.
• Good communication and writing skills, and create documentation where required.
• Demonstrates a desire to learn and grow professionally.
• Report to: Lead Level Designer

Salary Depending on experience
Date posted 03/12/2012

taken from http://www.gamesindustry.biz/jobs/crytek/germany/uk-and-europe/senior-level-designer-id45956



http://www.creativeskillset.org/games/careers/article_2768_1.asp

Thursday, 1 November 2012

Legal issues




Legal issues within the games industry



There are two main types of legal issues that affect the games industry, industry practices and consumer practices. Industry practices are problems relating or caused by the industry itself like working conditions and contracts. Where as consumer practice are legal issues involving the consumer, the people that play the games, these are things like jail breaking and pirating games.

The games industry has intellectually property laws; these are a form of industry practice. Intellectually properties are laws or contracts set in place to guard your work and your ideas. The most common is copyright laws, these are laws set in place to protect your work being copied. This however does not protect your ideas or even the idea behind the work you have copyrighted. But it does stop people from stealing your work or manipulating it and claiming it as your own. A good example of this was in 2011 Bethesda tried to sue Mojang, as Mojang planed to name their second game “scrolls” Bethesda saw this as copyright infringement as they believed they owned the name scrolls, from there game series the elder scrolls. This was taken too court and the judge decided that Mojang could use the name scrolls, but only once. As making a series called scrolls would be more like the elder scroll series. Another example of copyrighting is in august 2012 EA’s maxis put forward a lawsuit against Zynga, claiming there facebook game “the Ville” was a rip off of EA’s facebook game “sim social”. This has yet to be stetted but will be in court. 

EA's sim social

 



 



 Zynga's the ville












Another form of industry practice is the contracts with the games developers. A games developer will have contracts will all employees as well as with other companies. There are trade secret contracts with game companies to prevent employees from sharing company secrets with anyone, especially other companies. If these laws are broken then the company has the right to sue the individual. An example of this is Jason West and Vincent Zampella who where fired from infinity war, as they were found to be in contact with EA, Activision main competitor, this lead to all of infinity ward’s staff leaving and making Respawn entertainment. There can also be contracts between games companies or even between games companies and other unrelated companies. Often a games development industry will be provided money by another company to produce a game. An example of this was when 38 studios were given $75 million by the state of Rhode Island to move there and create 450 jobs for the new state. To try and repay the money 38 studios started working on 2 separate games, and rpg called kingdom on Amalur and a mmo named Copernicus, they hoped that with the money from kingdom on Amalur they could pay Rhode island and fund there next game, however kingdom of Amalur failed and didn’t produce enough money and so the contract failed and the company went bankrupt. This could have been avoided if the company had focused on one game, they could have made kingdom of Amalur much better, meaning more people would buy it, meaning 38 studios would have money to fund there next game, also this would have meant we gamers would have a much better rpg to play. 

Working condition in the games industry is another form of industry practices. Like all industry there are laws and guidelines as to how the games industry should be ran. Restricting the amount of hours required to work, the conditions of the working environment and how the employ should be treated. These restrictions don’t just help the employees they also help the company. For example Team bondi were the team originally working on L.A noir, but because of the work conditions the game was taken over by Rockstar in 2006, meaning the game was in development for 7 years, way long then expected. Team bondi’s had many working condition problems, firstly they didn’t treat employees well, they over worked them, having them work 6-7 days a week, and they would often fire employees for not keeping deadlines that were impossible to keep, meaning the staffing changed very often, making it hard for the company to finish the game together. They also went way to much over the budget, the leaders were always coming up with new ideas and redesigning parts of the story meaning they paid to make a lot of content that was unneeded, leading too dept very fast, and so have to sell to Rockstar. These things could have been avoided if the leaders stopped treating the game as their own play thing and let the workers create something that would sell. Also the employees should have spoken out sooner, as soon as they were under presser to give up their weekends at risk of being fired. This would have meant that the matter would have been settled, perhaps in court. This could have meant the scrapping of the game at worst, or at best the project leaders would have been forced to follow the rules, meaning less people would have been fire. This would have meant the game wouldn’t have taken 7 years, as the same people would have been able to work on it and we as consumers would have a much better game to play.

One of the biggest forms of consumer practices in the games industry is piracy. Piracy is a massive problem for games, especially for pc games. It is all to easy to pirate a game on the pc, and so often developers do not receive anywhere near how much money they should for a game Many developers have stopped releasing games on the pc because they know their game will be pirated. It takes money to format a game to a different platform, in a way you need to produce the game several time, once for every consol, this takes up a lot of money and so many developers don’t format their games for pc as they know they many not even make enough money out of it to break even with making it. Often however people feel there is a need to prate a game, if that game is very old and impossible to buy anywhere. The games industry often encourages this, as they want there old games to be played. Companies like steam can help with this, as they have many old games that are hard to access anymore, that you can buy cheaply which will still help the industry. Piracy is the reason the legislation laws SOPA (stop online piracy act) and PIPA (protect IP Act) where considered. The idea of these bills where to make it harder for pirated material to be spread through the internet. This was a fairly good idea, as it would stop piracy, meaning no games could be pirated and so would have to be brought raising the amount of money the games industry would make. However this would mean no one could copy anything without permission, we wouldn’t be able to upload any videos on things like youtube, with game footage in, and if we did youtube would have to be shut down, and so evidently the bill would affect the internet. So for that reason the bills weren’t passed.


Another consumer practice is jail breaking. This is where you modify the software of a machine giving greater control of it. The original idea was to unlock the machine in order to make and add your own application, making it more personal, like making the operating system on a ps3 Linux, which was originally promised. So many people have jail broke there Ps3 to run on Linux, which they believe and argue is alright as ps3 originally aloud it. However some people use jail breaking to copy games. Things like the r4 for the Nintendo DS which were originally for making your own programs are now are mainly used for copyrighting games, which affects the games industry. As r4s can store thousands of games, meaning the developers do not receive the money they should for your purchasing that game, meaning to it hard for a games company to fund there next game.    
 



Bibliography

http://collider.com/la-noire-review/93603/ (accessed 31/11/12)

Thursday, 4 October 2012

Ethical Issues




Ethics within the games industry


There are a lot of ethical issues within the games industry, both with the games and within them. Games are a twisted version of real life, in them there is every imaginable scenario, but just because we can create such scenarios do not mean that they are ethically right and accepted.

A game itself is a story and within that story we are often given choices. In RPG games like mass effect, fable and bioshock we are given ethically choices that will change the character and the story.  We chose our version of what we think is right and wrong. We can play as a hero or an anti hero, an anti hero being someone who is a hero but does so in a mean, hard core kind of way. For example within mass effect we continually have decision on where to go, what to say and what to do. We decide how to respond to things, we can be good and caring or we can be mean and to the point. Our choices affect the game massively; our characters appearance changes, looking more evil or good depending on how you play, and the story can change. Each mass effect game ends with a choice. In the first one you can choose to save the council or let them die; this is an ethically choice and will affect the story and what is to come. Games like this where we can choice our own moral compass are very popular, and adding this simple human nature, of choosing what we want, increases the popularity of the game and as such how much money it produces.

Many games have a pre set story, in these we aren’t given a choices, you will be forced to play that path whether you agree with it or not. This is where games start to get controversial. Adding content to a game that is considered ethically wrong or questionable can easily ruin the games reputations. Games such as grand theft auto, where there is a high level of violence and your aim is to do bad things, have received bad reputations as parents believe they set a bad example to children and encourage and lead to violence. Games like this seem to accept and encourage things that are considered ethically wrong. For example in COD modern warfare 2 the mission “no Russia” allows people to play from the position of a terrorist, shooting down innocent civilians. You are not discouraged away from this, the game does not tell you that this is morally wrong and that it is bad that such things have happened. The game seems to approach this controversial scenario light heartedly. Making it seem like just another part of life, this set a bad example for children and so many parents will have stopped their children from playing it, which affects the amount of purchases of the game. There is an option to skip the missions but this will not change the fact that parents will disagree with the game and so sales of the game will reduce. Controversial games like this do get banned. The first game banned for controversial violence being death race in 2000, this game was banned as the aim was to run people over, a very ethically wrong thing. Even though the game was extremely simple and you could barely tell what a human was and what was a car, the game was banned as it was thought to be setting a bad example. Many violent games have been banned, games like man hunt, mortal kombat and doom or the reason regulator bodies like ESRB were set up. To monitor and give appropriate age ranges for every game.

Games may also be offensive to races or religions and so games developers must ensure there games will not cause offence, and that there point is clearly presented. We live in a society where everyone is considered equal and so games developers must ensure that they do not segregate a certain race or present them in a stereotype form. Resident evil five is a good example of what can happen. There is resident evil 5 trailer of Chris Redfield the American hero shooting African zombies. However to those who do not know the series this trailer can seem to be just about Redfield killing Africans. In this trailer it is hard to distinguish between an ordinary African and an African zombie and so the trailer presents the game as something very different to what it is. It shows it as just an American kill Africans, which is morally very wrong, it is ethically wrong to kill anyone and especially wrong to kill someone just for there race/religion. So games producers have to make sure they present there game correctly and stay away from ethically questionable scenarios. As it will put people off the game and gain it a bad reputation. 

The games industry itself can be ethically questionable. To many companies money is the most important out come of making a game, and so many companies squeeze as much money out of us as possible. This can be very simple things like giving pre order DLC. An added item or mission within the game will pressurise people into pre ordering the game, and in doing so the game maker ensures they sell a set amount on the day of release. This is questionable as to some it seems wrong that those with money to buy games fast are rewarded and those who must save, receive nothing, or may be forced to pay for the items. This seems even more questionable when the DLC is already on the desk, but you required too pay to unlock it.





Bibliography




Regulatory Bodies




Regulatory bodies within the Games industry



Regulatory bodies are government run agencies or a public authorities that have been set up to monitor some form of human activity and to come up with rules and guidelines within that area.    
There are few regulatory within the games industry. Although there are several regulatory bodies that clearly label appropriate age rating of games and are done so with government backing. There is a lot of fear from parents that games lead to violent children and so regulatory bodies have been set up to review the age rating of games to ensure that games are not sold to the inappropriate age range, which prevents children from easily playing games that are considered too violent or mature. Laws have been put in place to ensure merchants do not sell games to children under the set age range of games. It they do so the merchant can be heavily fined or jailed depending on the country there in. these regulatory bodies also effect the games industry. Games developers must ensure that there game has a set age range and that they stick to that throughout the games developments stage or they may get to the end of development and find their game is considered to viloent or inappropriate for their originally intended audience. This could stop the game from being released perhaps lead to the age rating being changed, which may affect the amount of purchases.
 

ESRB

The Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) was the first regulatory body to be set up for the games industry. There where founded in 1994 with government backing, after the outrage of violence within games such as mortal combat and doom. Their job being to monitor and give appropriate age ratings for games within Canada and the United States. Their aim is to give appropriate age ratings and to ensure parents understand what is within the games their children are playing.  



PEGI

The Pan-European Game Information (PEGI) aged rating system was made to help parents within Europe to make decisions on the games they buy their children. It was made in 2003 to replace a number of nation age rating systems, making them all one united system.  The system is supported and used by all major consol manufactures. It is one of them most commonly used and favourite rating systems as it clearly labels any inappropriate games play.



There are other regulatory bodies within the games industry, but ESRB and PEGI are the most commonly used and noticed. But not matter who they are these regulatory bodies are all for the same thing. They monitor and rate videos games for things like violence, sex and drugs. To ensure all children are safe from such things and do not lose there innocents early.





Bibliography

http://www.esrb.org/about/index.jsp (accessed 01/10/12) 
http://www.pegi.info/en/index/id/28/ (accessed 01/10/12)