मैगज़्टर गोल्ड के साथ असीमित हो जाओ

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In the chair with...ROGER HECTOR

Retro Gamer

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Issue 244

He joined Atari in its black-and-white days and is still making videogames almost half a century later. Roger Hector shares stories of holograms, vector tanks and scratched Sonic soundtracks

- Paul Drury

In the chair with...ROGER HECTOR

Over your long career, you have worked at some of the biggest names in the industry, including Atari, Bally Sente, Electronic Arts, Disney, Sega and Namco Bandai. Which one were you happiest at?
Oh gosh, that is a tough one to answer because for me, it’s been multiple decades and every one of those companies had its own qualities, its own pluses and minuses. I did really enjoy Atari because when I first joined, no one really knew what Atari was. It was almost non-existent.

How did you find out about it, then?
I had a college friend, Peter Takaichi, who worked there. I had moved to the Midwest [of America] and really wasn’t enjoying it because the weather was terrible [laughs]. I wanted to come back to California! I grew up in San Jose, pretty close to this strange company Pete worked for called Atari. He said they had made Pong, which was the only videogame I’d ever heard of, and I should come and work for them.

Surely you don’t get a job at Atari just because you know someone who works there?
That was pretty much it [laughs]. It was 1976, the early days, and they couldn’t hire people with videogame experience, because no one had it, right? So they hired people with ‘related experience’. I had a degree in industrial design and learning to draw and render was part [of the course]. Pete ran the design department at Atari, where they designed the coin-op cabinets, because back then, every cabinet was different. I worked there for a year or so and then worked for a guy called George Opperman.

We know that name! He was responsible for much of the art of Atari, including the iconic Fuji logo.

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THE LATE-NINETIES AND EARLY NOUGHTIES WERE THE GOLDEN YEARS OF JAMES BOND VIDEOGAMES. AT THE CENTRE OF IT ALL IS THE MUCH-LOVED 2002 RELEASE NIGHTFIRE. THE GAME'C CO COMPOSER, AND LIFELONG BOND FAN, JEFF TYMOSCHUK KEENLY PAID HOMAGE TO THE SERIES' ICONIC MUSIC WITH HIS OWN REFERENCE-LADEN SOUNDTRACK

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FEW ARCADE GAMES WERE AS IMPOSING, AS ICONIC OR AS INFLUENTIAL AS TAITO'S HIT COIN-OP THAT REDEFINED THE LIGHTGUN GENRE. IN THIS EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW, THE GAME'S DIRECTOR TOSHIAKI KATO REVEALS THE UNTOLD STORY BEHIND THE MAKING OF THIS ARCADE MILESTONE

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OFFICIAL UK PLAYSTATION MAGAZINE #31

THE PLAYSTATION HAD TAKEN THE WORLD BY STORM AND BUILT AN EARLY LIBRARY OF ICONIC TITLES. NOW THEY WERE GETTING SEQUELS, WHICH WOULD BUILD ON THEIR FOUNDATIONS AND DELIVER SOME OF THE BEST GAMES EVER MADE. THIS MONTH'S DISC FEATURES ONE OF THEM

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There was a time, before online preorders, when a console launch felt like a holiday. You circled the date on the calendar, started saving up your money and cleared your schedule as if the whole thing was a proper vacation. And back then, scarcity wasn't much of a concern. As long as you had a retailer nearby and some patience, you had a fair shot. Then came the Flippers.

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FOR OVER 20 YEARS, TETSUYA MIZUGUCHI HAS CHASED THE DREAM OF SYNESTHETIC GAMING WITH SUCH TITLES AS REZ, CHILD OF EDEN, TETRIS EFFECT AND LUMINES. WITH LUMINES ARISE JUST WEEKS AWAY, WE TALK TO THE LEGENDARY GAME CREATOR ABOUT THE MAKING OF HIS ORIGINAL MUSICAL PUZZLER

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