The Big C Game Competition 17
Thanks to Slamdance for its submission. Coming up at The Slamdance Film festival in Park City, Utah - Jan. 21 to 28 2005, programmers can compete in The Big C Independent Game Competition. "The Big C is calling for entries of all new games from emerging talent. Selected games will compete and be judged by festival attendees, with a Jury Award and Audience Award that include cash and prizes presented at the end of the festival. Game submissions should have an early-postmarked deadline of Oct. 1, 2004 and a final postmarked deadline of Nov. 14, 2004. Entrants may submit games on disk or provide a URL for judges to download." The event has an entry on the Gamasutra Calendar, for additional info.
Re:Gah (Score:5, Informative)
Console programmers with a legacy codebase.
We don't have a choice for bindings to the thin-vineer of an OS, so it's either C or C++. Most C programmers switch over to C++ because of the new paradigms the language lets you express natively, and fortunately the language is backwards compatible. (Its strength is also its weakness.)
I'm not sure why you got modded down as flamebait. Any language is unsafe. Some just make it easier to use & abuse then others
Oh well...
--
Original, Fun Palm games by the Lead Designer of Majesty!
http://www.arcanejourneys.com/ [arcanejourneys.com]
Re:Gah (Score:2, Informative)
Sigh.
Re:Gah (Score:4, Informative)
They really don't seem to know what they are getting into. They say if your game needs extra hardware (like vr glasses) then you need to supply it, but they don't say if the game is to be run on a Windows machine, or an OSX machine, or anything. There is just a field on the entry form for "System Requirements."
The lack of information was enough to scare me off from it, let alone the 49.99$ entry fee. I'll give them points for trying to branch into something new, though.
Re:Gah (Score:1)
Oh! You don't get it! For example, if your game need to be run on a Pentium computer with Windows , you have to supply it
These guys are genius : 200 entries = 10k$ + 200 computers!!! Why didn't I think about that before ?
Platform? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Platform? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Platform? (Score:2)
Re:Platform? (Score:2)
And no I didn't RTFA...
Mod authors? (Score:1)
Re:Mod authors? (Score:3, Informative)
You'd have to e-mail them and ask them, but I'd say "no."
Re:Mod authors? (Score:1)
How to make money in games fast!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
With writing and poetry, this is an old scheme (not quite scam, but scheme). Charge for a contest and sell the results.
What's next-- for-pay music auditions for the RIAA? Ooh, I know-- submit your stories to slashdot, just $2 per submission, and if yours is chosen as the best submission of the year, you win! No dups allowed.
Re:How to make money in games fast!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How to make money in games fast!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
I made a short film a few years back and went through the process of entering it in all the major fests-- Sundance, Slamdance, SXWS, and about fifteen to twenty more. Each one had an entry fee of $25-$65. Each one sent me back a polite rejection letter, usually not even signed by a human. I had no guarantee that anyone even watched the damn thing, especially anyone in a position to decide to put it in the
So who wants to... (Score:2)
I volunteer to be the giant publishing exec who will beat around "my" coders and artists with a large spiked club. I need a few coders, artists and middle managers to man-handle. Pay is optional (my option), and if I make any money on the product, I reserve the right to obligate you to another year.
If interested let me know.
(Attention Electronic Arts Exec's, I would really like to work for you. Consider this post my cover letter!)