Chris Rhinehart

Chris Rhinehart is a programmer, game developer and co-founder of Human Head Studios and its successor Roundhouse Studios.

Biography

He started in 1994 in the game industry at the company Raven Software. He contributed to the programming of games such as Heretic, CyClones, Hexen: Beyond Heretic, Heretic: Shadow of the Serpent Riders, Necrodome, Take No Prisoners and Mageslayer alongside fellow developer Ben Gokey.

In 1997, he left the company Raven and co-founded Human Head Studios alongside Paul MacArthur, Shane Gurno, Ben Gokey, James Sumwalt, and Ted Halsted.

He worked on the titles Super Duelling Minivans, Rune and the add-on Halls of Valhalla, Blair Witch, Volume II: The Legend of Coffin Rock (installer) and most recently Prey.[1]

Chris's father Gene Rhinehart died in early 1999 before Rune was completed, and Chris managed to focus on getting the game done - in memory of his Dad. The final credits of the game are dedicated to him.[2]

Games credited

  • Heretic (1994), id Software, Inc.
  • CyClones (1994), Strategic Simulations, Inc.
  • Hexen: Beyond Heretic (1995), id Software, Inc.
  • Necrodome (1996), Mindscape International Ltd.
  • Heretic: Shadow of the Serpent Riders (1996), id Software, Inc.
  • Take No Prisoners (1997), Red Orb Entertainment
  • Super Duelling Minivans (1997), Human Head Studios, Inc.
  • Mageslayer (1997), GT Interactive Software Europe Ltd.
  • Rune (2000), Gathering of Developers, Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc.
  • Rune: Halls of Valhalla (2001), Gathering of Developers
  • Rune Gold (2001), God Games
  • Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project (2002), 3D Realms Entertainment
  • Prey (2006), 2K Games
gollark: To do it yourself. That is.
gollark: In any case, it would be stupid and very complex.
gollark: Access OpenGL somehow in a few cases?
gollark: Magic?
gollark: I mean, unless you do magic syscalls or whatever it is yourself.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.