Steve Cartwright

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Steve Cartwright in 2011

Steve Cartwright is an American video game designer.[1] He is best known as one of the original Activision game designers, credited with such games as Barnstorming, Megamania, Seaquest and Hacker.[2]

Activision[]

In 1982, Cartwright joined college classmate David Crane as the fifth game designer/programmer at Activision where he developed the following games:[3]

Accolade[]

In 1988, Cartwright joined Activision founders Alan Miller and Bob Whitehead at Accolade. Among his products were the Sierra-style graphic adventures Les Manley in: Search for the King and Les Manley in: Lost in L.A.—the first game to use live actors captured in front of a blue screen.[citation needed]

Electronic Arts[]

In 1993, Cartwright joined Electronic Arts.[4] He soon took over producer responsibility on the fledgling PGA Tour line and helped redesign the NBA Live product line. Among the many innovations to the golf line were the first use[2] of digitized golfers, the first EA golf product with 3D terrain, and the first use of a targeting arc and putting guides in a golf product.

In 1999, Cartwright designed and produced Tiger Woods '99. Additionally, Cartwright designed the product to include 1-button access to a game server and match server—making this EA's first online multiplayer sports game. Later, with the addition of the "Play Against The Pros" feature, Cartwright was awarded co-patent holder rights to the technology that eventually became the basis of the PGA Tour Shotlink technology.[citation needed]

Glu Mobile[]

In 2002, Cartwright joined Scott Orr as an internal developer at Glu Mobile, originally known as Sorrent. After a 10-year hiatus from programming, Cartwright developed six of Sorrent's first eight products. During the 2004 presidential election, Cartwright took his previous product and turned it into Bush vs. Kerry Boxing. He was later named Director of Production where products he designed, produced, or otherwise developed accounted for up to 70% of Glu Mobile revenue.[citation needed]

Later career[]

In 2006, Cartwright joined TV Head—later known as —as Executive Producer. TAG was a games-on-demand television network.

In 2008, Cartwright spent several months developing and pursuing VC funding for a Kid's MMO in the vein of Club Penguin. This endeavor was abandoned when he joined Slipgate Ironworks The company later became Gazillion Entertainment.

In 2009, Cartwright joined former colleagues and Sam Nelson in project design to make sports statistics fun and entertaining. The first project, Streakwise Draft Tracker 2011, reached #2 on the App Store.

In 2010, Cartwright joined RockYou as GM of the Redwood City Games Studio. In his first few weeks, he recruited John Yoo, lead designer on Zynga's CityVille, and helped RockYou establish a relationship with John Romero and his new company, Loot Drop. After managing through a difficult transition period following the layoff of nearly 1/3 of the company, Cartwright became Sr. Director of Design. He then worked closely with Executive Producer on the launch of RockYou's Zoo World 2 Facebook project.[5]

More recently, Cartwright lead the design of Bluescape's real-time cloud-based collaboration system. The Bluescape "wall" is currently being used by Lucas Film to plan and storyboard future Star Wars films.

References[]

  1. ^ "Classic Gaming Expo Distinguished Guest:STEVE CARTWRIGHT".
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b http://www.stevecartwright.com/
  3. ^ "GameSpy".
  4. ^ "Steve Cartwright".
  5. ^ "RockYou CEO and Founder Lance Tokuda stepping down".

External links[]

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