Roger Keating
Roger Keating is an Australian computer game designer of New Zealand descent.[1] Along with Ian Trout, Keating co-founded of the video game company Strategic Studies Group,[2][3] which is known for its strategic war and fantasy games with artificial intelligence.[4] Keating and Trout worked together on the majority of SSG titles.
Roger Keating | |
---|---|
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation | Video game designer |
Early life
Keating was born in New Zealand. He moved to Australia in 1978 and worked as a mathematics and physics teacher.[5]
Career in game design
Keating created his first game, Conflict, in 1979. It was published by American software house Strategic Simulations.[5] Keating left his teaching job to program full-time, and published seven games while working with SSI during 1981 and 1982. Keating later worked as a school teacher in New Zealand.[6]
In 1983 Keating, along with Ian Trout formed Strategic Studies Group. Gregor Whiley joined the company in 1986 for the development of BattleFront.[7] The company created many strategy games over the following 25 years. After his business partner Ian Trout's death, both Keating and Whiley worked part-time at The Northern Sydney Institute for four years between 2011 and 2014 while developing their games part-time. They both moved to work for the Academy of Interactive Entertainment in 2015, where Keating taught programming.
List of games
- Computer Conflict (1980)
- Operation Apocalypse
- Southern Command[8]
- Germany 1985 (1983)
- RDF 1985 (1983)
- Baltic 1985: Corridor to Berlin (1984)
- Carriers at War (1984)[9][10]
- Norway 1985 (1985)
- Reach for the Stars[11][12]
- Europe Ablaze
- Battlefront[13]
- Russia: The Great War in the East[14]
- Halls of Montezuma
- Rommel: Battles for North Africa
- Decisive Battles of the American Civil War Volume 1: Bull Run to Chancellorsville (1988)
- Decisive Battles of the American Civil War Vol. 2
- Decisive Battles of the American Civil War Vol. 3
- Panzer Battles
- MacArthur's War: Battles for Korea
- Gold of the Americas
- Warlords (1990)
- Warlords II (1993)
- Warlords II Scenario Builder (1994)
- Warlords II Deluxe (1995)
- Warlords III: Reign of Heroes (1997)[4]
- Warlords III: Darklords Rising (1998)
- Warlords Battlecry (2000)
- Warlords Battlecry II (2002)[15]
- Ardennes Offensive
- Carriers at War 2
- Carriers at War: Construction Kit
- Korsun Pocket
- Battles in Italy
- Battlefront
- Battles in Normandy (2004)[8][14]
- Kharkov[16]
References
- Chris Crawford (2003). Chris Crawford on Game Design. New Riders. pp. 192–. ISBN 978-0-13-146099-7.
- "The best in war game software". Compute's Getting Started With: Entertainment Software by Wallace Poulter
- "Will Fresno Survive? : Players Save, Destroy World—for Fun". 9 July 1986|PETER BAKER | Los Angeles Times
- Rick Barba; Ted Chapman (1997). Warlords III: The Official Strategy Guide. Prima Games. ISBN 978-0-7615-1199-1.
- "Strategies of a Man Down Under". Softline, March 1983.
- Peter Watkins (1986). High Tech, Low Tech and Education. Deakin University. ISBN 978-0-7300-0402-8.
- Chatteur, Fiona (2014). "Computer Graphics Through the Screen of Strategic Studies Group". Born Digital and Cultural Heritage Conference: 4.
- "Game Review: Battles in Normandy". Australian Apple Review, page 40, bybb Gene Stephan.
- Peter P. Perla (January 1990). The Art of Wargaming: A Guide for Professionals and Hobbyists. Naval Institute Press. pp. 184–. ISBN 978-0-87021-050-1.
- Ben Sawyer; Alex Dunne; Tor Berg (1998). Game Developer's Marketplace. Coriolis Group Books. p. 192. ISBN 978-1-57610-177-3.
- David Myers (1 January 2003). The Nature of Computer Games: Play as Semiosis. P. Lang. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-8204-6700-9.
- Neal Roger Tringham (10 September 2014). Science Fiction Video Games. CRC Press. pp. 390–. ISBN 978-1-4822-0388-2.
- Software Reviews on File. Facts on File, Incorporated. 1987. p. 29.
- Ten Years of Technology and Dedication. Ziff-Davis Publishing Company. 1989. pp. 112, 130.
- "A Louder Battlecry". IGN
- Australian Centre for the Moving Image – http://www.acmi.net.au/global/docs/games_history_australia.pdf Archived 28 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- SSG Website, last updated in 2010