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David Fox (game designer)

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Name
  
David Fox


Role
  
Game designer


Education
  
University of California, Los Angeles

Movies
  
A Hindu's Indictment of Heaven

Similar People
  
Ron Gilbert, Brian Moriarty, David Spangler, Bill Budge, Archer MacLean

Matt chat 138 david fox on lucasfilm games


David Fox is an American multimedia producer who designed and programmed numerous early LucasArts games. He and his wife, Annie Fox, now work on educational software, Web design, Emotional Intelligence content, online communities, emerging technologies, and writing books for children and teens.

Contents

David fox zak mckracken rube works sup holmes ep 137


Early work

Fox is based in the San Francisco Bay Area. At age eleven, he made his first 8 mm cartoon using stacks of discarded Flintstones cels he found in the trash bins behind Hanna-Barbera. He studied engineering at UCLA and Humanistic Psychology at Sonoma State University, where he received his bachelor's degree. Fox and his wife Annie co-founded Marin Computer Center in 1977 - the world’s first public-access microcomputer center. He co-authored the books Computer Animation Primer, Armchair BASIC, and Pascal Primer.

LucasArts

His books led to him being hired as a founding member of the Games Division at Lucasfilm (later renamed LucasArts). Over the next ten years, he was the designer, project leader, and one of the programmers for the games Rescue on Fractalus!, Labyrinth, Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure. He also worked on Maniac Mansion as the primary script programmer. Fox was part of the memorable team that included Ron Gilbert and Noah Falstein.

He spent his last two years at LucasArts as Manager of Entertainment Software on Mirage (a collaboration between LucasArts and Hughes Aircraft Corporation). This multi-player, networked location-based entertainment system was intended for theme parks, but like several early Lucasfilm projects of the time, was too advanced and hence too expensive for the market at that time.

Talk City

After leaving LucasArts, Fox was a Senior Game Designer at Rocket Science Games, then worked as a freelance consultant on several games. In 1996, he joined LiveWorld Inc./Talk City, an Internet community provider, as their Director of Kids and Entertainment Programming. During his four years at the company, he produced The InSite, a Web site for teen empowerment, and then became the Director of New Content.

In 2001, he returned to immersive gaming at Xulu Entertainment, producing their motion simulator project. Then he produced and designed a prototype of an educational game for Learning Friends under a grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

Recent and current work

In the run-up to the 2004 Democratic primaries, Fox was active on Howard Dean's Media Team (responsible for Switch2Dean.com) and built a blog for Simon & Schuster on Dean's book, Winning Back America.

Since then, Fox has developed Web sites for authors David McCullough and Terry Gamble, Alaska Federation of Natives and Marin Democrats, all with graphic designer Daniel Will-Harris.

From 2005 to 2011, he was the Director of Production for NewsTrust, a citizen news rating service aiming to bring together experienced journalists and volunteer reviewers.

He currently designs apps for the iTunes App Store. His most recent game is Rube Works: The Official Rube Goldberg Invention Game, the first Rube Goldberg game authorized by The Heirs of Rube Goldberg.

In December 2014 Ron Gilbert announced that David Fox is joining him and Gary Winnick in the programming, scripting and writing of the Adventure Game Thimbleweed Park.

LucasArts and Scumm

  • LucasArts adventure games
  • SCUMM
  • ScummVM
  • Games

  • 1984 Rescue on Fractalus!
  • 1986 Labyrinth
  • 1987 Maniac Mansion
  • 1988 Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders
  • 1989 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure
  • 1989 Pipe Dream
  • 2014 Rube Works
  • 2017 Thimbleweed Park
  • References

    David Fox (game designer) Wikipedia