Author Archives: Shahid Ahmad
Antonio
BTFBoss received this email (amongst many). It speaks for itself.
I think what you guys are doing is great. I’m still in High Schoolmyself but due to my increase in size since freshman year people tendnot to mess with me so much anymore.I think it’s great that something like this exists to help people whoare less fortunate to persevere and rise above their situation. I’mworking on a game with a small group of people, and I would definitelysay that a lot of my influence for some of the enemies has come fromexperiences with bullies and knowing what it truly means to be scaredand feel overwhelmed. People who are being tormented beyond beliefsimply because of who they are should not learn to resent themselves,but wave their personal flag high.Now I guess what I’m getting at is that I love what you’re doing here.Please, continue for the sake of all of those kids, teenagers, andadults you have the potential to reach and help. Just… keep savinglives, Keep saving minds.Antonio
Olav Larsen
Ash Morgan
Name / Twitter handle?
Ash Morgan / @Ranooth
What do you do?
I’m a producer (soon to be studio head) for a indie games company called Dojit and a bit of a testing consultant if people ever need help with it
Where were you born?
Hereford, United Kingdom
And where are you now?
Birmingham, United Kingdom
Favourite game of all time?
Dungeon Keeper 2
What was the last game you enjoyed?
Far Cry 3, total freedom in a great sandbox setting – plus you can re-create scenes from Rambo all the time
Tell us about some of the bullying you experienced.
My experiences with bullying were weird compared to others, I never had the “classic” big bully with his “cronies” who one would fear. My main bully was a person younger and smaller then myself and also someone I considered a friend, for the sake of this explanation let’s call him “Kid X”.
During my first year of High School a lot of kids would insult and call me names, spearheaded by “Kid X”. This was general hazing but I took it all to heart and lashed out which caused more people to mock me, I essentially became the joke of my year. Some kids decided to get physical and would punch me to see me react. I remember being punched in the guy pretty hard for not giving up a seat quick enough. Teachers would commonly see what happened and do nothing, or worse blame me. I was told many times that I was the problem and was told that my weight was probably the cause. A teacher who ironically was quite large told me I had to lose weight or “face insults for the rest of my life”. The thing is I wasn’t that large a child, obviously I comfort ate a bit but I was hardly the fattest in my year.
The physical and bullying continued till my third year until I finally fought back against “Kid X”, I hardly remember the fight as I blacked out due to anger. I did however break “Kid X”’s leg and “win” the fight. I was suspended but I didn’t care, my parents understood why it happened and I was proud that I stood up for myself.
However this didn’t stop all the problems, I lost the rest of my friends because my teachers forced them to decide between me and “Kid X” and again I quickly became the joke of the year all over again although all the physical bullying stopped. Teachers did nothing about it and I just learnt to accept it, hide when I could and finish the school day as quickly as I could.
I have a million and one different stories of what happened in my time at school, but most boil down to someone insulting / attacking me, teachers doing nothing to stop it and blaming me instead, my self esteem dropping and my parents trying their best to support me and demand answers from the school.
When did you manage the bullying?
I didn’t really manage it at all; I took everything to heart and didn’t stand up for myself. I did stand up for myself a bit more after the fight but was still mocked. I was still ridiculed a little bit at the very beginning of college, but I was able to re-invent myself and find friends who actually liked/respected me.
What effect do you think bullying had on you?
My time at High School affected me a lot, at the time I doubted myself and had very little self esteem. I thought my life would be crap as people would pick on me forever.
Thankfully after college this wasn’t the case, but the memories of what happened still affect me, I find myself remembering little flashes of what happened and how I felt and it does really get me down. I do try my best to repress these memories but it doesn’t always work.
How is your life better now?
My life is kick ass! I found the girl of my dreams at the end of college and we’ve been together ever since, I went to an awesome uni and made a tonne of friends who I love. I graduated with a really good grade and a great little reputation in the indie games industry.
I have only really just started being a producer for Dojit but I am enjoying the challenge and what is coming next.
Did you ever think life was going to be this good?
Not at all, like i said earlier I thought people would continue to pick on and mock me throughout my life but things in my life have overall been great.
What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
Do not give up. I know it’s tough and you probably think it’s just going to get worse but keep going, keep believing and keep driving towards your dream. Bullies are odd creatures; they do what they do for little to no reason and will try and take EVERYTHING from you. You cannot let that happen, as long as you have your hopes and your self-respect you can achieve what you want in life and hold your head high. No amount of name-calling, threats or personal attacks can take that away from you.
Magnus Hollmo
Name and Twitter handle?
Magnus Hollmo / @SimGuruMeatball
What do you do now?
I work as an Art Director for Electronic Arts.
Birth place:
Hudiksvall, Sweden
Currently residing where in the world?
San Francisco, USA
Favourite video game of all time?
I have a very hard time picking a specific favorite. But I do have a lot of very fond memories from playing different adventure games by Lucas Arts and Sierra.
What was the last game you enjoyed and why?
Swing King on the iOS. Beautiful artwork combined with smart puzzles and fun physics-based gameplay.
Describe very briefly any of the bullying you experienced.
I was a very thin and fragile boy who spent time at home drawing or sitting in front of my computer rather than doing sports or trying to hang with the “cool” kids. I was different and was therefore an obvious target for bullies. It was mostly older boys who enjoyed anything from verbal abuse to vandalizing my school locker and even physical abuse. It wouldn’t stop as soon as I left school, they would also approach me on my ride home or any other location outside the school environment where they could get to me.
When did you manage the bullying?
I tried getting help from friends, parents and teachers at various time, but nothing really helped. Eventually, as I got older, and started at another school, I got better friends and learned to stand up for myself better. Also, since I was getting older, so were my bullies, so eventually they became a bit more mature themselves and the bullying disappeared.
What effect do you think it had on you?
In a way, you can say that bullying got me to where I am today. It made me more introvert and instead of being able to be social, I focused a lot on my art and computer knowledge. I learnt skills that helped me getting my first job in the games industry. I was pretty depressed during school and I was not able to focus on my homework or feel like I wanted to be in school at all, because of the bullying. So I wasn’t a very good student. I graduated with mediocre grades and did not know what to do with my life. It was then I learned that I actually had very particular skills and talent which were rare and highly desirable, so I started working with games straight out of high school.
How is your life better now?
I have a really hard time relating to when I was young. My life today is so completely different in all ways possible, for the better. I get to work with something I love every day, and I even get paid for doing so! I am surrounded by amazing and creative people, I laugh and have fun almost every moment of my life. I am also blessed by living in one of the most fascinating and wondrous cities in the world, a city where anything is possible and where people are accepted for who they are. Bullying stopped me from doing sports, but today I am very active and my current life allows me to do something I love every day, playing soccer! As a kid I never got to be social through sports, today sports have given me friends for life from places like Pixar and LucasFilm. Every day I am surrounded by things that I only dreamt about as a young boy and I look forward to every moment life will bring me!
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
Certainly not when I was a teenager, no. I felt very alone, scared and negative regarding life in general. Today it is the complete opposite, I believe that anything is possible and that life is wonderful!
What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
Believe in yourself. There is absolutely nothing wrong with you, you are unique and amazing! There is nothing you can’t accomplish. Don’t be afraid to reach out for help and never stop dreaming. There is a better tomorrow, trust me.
Dr. Mike Reddy
Do Video Games Cause Violence?
Some of the recent tragedies to have unfolded in the USA have prompted calls for video games to come under review. Whilst some of the measures being proposed are eminently sensible, others are reactionary and fail to address decades of research that shows that there appears to be no causal link between perpetrators of violence and their gaming habits. It’s an easy trap to fall into and one I can relate to.
Some of the more sensible measures being proposed include restricting the sale of titles featuring violence to minors. That this isn’t being policed already is a shame. I would also suggest that parents have a duty of care to their children and shouldn’t arbitrarily expose their children to adult content, or turn a blind eye to them doing so.
In my own case, I enjoyed Call of Duty: Modern Warfare for years, playing against people online. Although I certainly experience raised adrenaline levels and am sometimes shocked by the blurring of lines between what’s happening in the real world and what I am able to achieve on screen, I feel no compulsion to take to the streets with an automatic weapon, or any weapon for that matter. Anyone who lives in London knows that one of the most dangerous weapons these days is a loaded mouth. One wrong word to the wrong person can cause all kinds of trouble. We don’t even look at each other on buses!
That gang violence in London is dominated by knives should beg the question: Where are the video games portraying youths arbitrarily shanking one another that have caused this mess?
There is another argument that the continual exposure to violent material has a desensitising effect on society. It means we are less shocked by gun crime than perhaps we might otherwise be. It certainly doesn’t mean that more of us want to take up arms. Gun controls in the UK after Dunblane have been on the whole, successful, whilst video game depiction of gun violence has become more graphic, but we don’t hear people arguing that an increase in video game violence is what has resulted in a decrease in real gun crime.
Here’s what I’m seeing: That with the stories on this site from the people who make all kinds of video games, a childhood in which violence was inflicted on them has resulted in a flowering of creativity, character, calm, peace and success that is truly inspiring. If you want to see an example of this in the world of computer science, you need look no further than the deeply moving story of Ping Fu. Now we see examples from the world of video games, where the likes of Rami Ismail, Mike Bithell, Byron Atkinson-Jones, Stephen McGreal, Mark Kilborn, Charlotte Conopo and many others show that although violence was inflicted on them when they were young, and although they felt no hope then, now, their lives are a joy and an inspiration. Surely, the beacons that are these wonderful people will shine a torch for some tragic young person to edge hopefully towards, despite their daily grim reality. This is life “Beyond the Final Boss”
We can now legitimately ask the question: Do video games cause violence? Or does violence cause video games?
Charlie Nash
Name and Twitter handle?
Charlie Nash / @MrNashington
Where were you born?
Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.
Which part of the world do you live in nowadays?
England, United Kingdom.
What’s your favourite video game of all time?
Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas.
What was the last video game you enjoyed?
The Journey Down: Chapter One.
Can you describe some of the bullying you experienced?
I used to get bullied for being quite nerdy and not being as athletically fit and ‘strong’ as everyone else. I really disliked Physical Education (PE) and would prefer to do more creative things such as draw and think of game ideas which led to lots of name calling etc.
When did you manage the bullying?
Around Year 9 I stopped getting bullied as much, as people started liking me because I was funny and a little bit odd, hehe. Then by the start of Year 10 I had developed a good bunch of friends who were also nerdy like myself, and also a few friends that were not nerdy who stood up for me.
What effect do you think bullying had on you?
It definitely made me tougher. But I also think it was all for the best as the bullying is what led me to meet some of my good friends today.
What do you do now?
I am currently still in full time education, whilst developing games and doing a little bit of Video Game journalism in whatever time I have.
How is your life better now?
As I am still rather young (Or a “Pre-beard Indie” as Mike Bithell calls me) these experiences were not long ago (Which is not a bad thing,
as I’m sure the people reading this will find my experiences easy to relate to). Anyway, since I have been in the games industry it has
boosted my confidence massively by having to talk to others in the industry face-to-face at events such as Eurogamer Expo, which is a great
skill/trait to possess as it boosts your morale and makes it much easy to talk to people confidently. And I have met a bunch of cool people
as well such as Mike Bithell, Simon Roth, and Peter Molyneux.
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
I still have a long life ahead of me, but so far my life has been incredibly awesome and lots better than I thought it would be!
What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
I would say that there isn’t a better option to choose than Video Games, or any hobby really! When you have something that you are really
into, it creates something to look forward to when you are at school. Then when you are really into video games and are desperate to use your own ideas and create your own stuff, learn a programming language so that you can put all your ideas to practise!
cocos2d::CCObject *
Rob Fearon
Rob Fearon / @retroremakes
I’m a full time carer who makes videogames. In that order. Sometimes I’m helping someone else live their life to the fullest, other times I’m flashing lights in people’s faces whilst sitting around in my underwear. Both of these things are good things, both of these things make me happy.
North West England
England
Space Giraffe
Dishonored, a game which happily hands you the toys and let’s you muddle your own way through to the finale, but really, it’s a game about owning your mistakes and rolling with them. That’s when it’s at its best.
I lived at the rough end of town at the wrong time for the town and the bullying there was constant. There were a couple of families where this stuff, it wasn’t just one lad gone awry, this was generational stuff. The same folks that bullied me, their parents bullied my parents and so it went before. Dad hit son hit whoever was passing and so it went on. One of the worst families for it lived at a house between mine and my best friends, they’d run out of the house when you passed it just to hurl abuse or to try and hit you. It was so screwed up, the parents would join in. I still don’t know what to make of that.
Years later, when I was much older, they’d lurk outside pubs waiting for fights with strangers, sometimes carrying weapons, whatever it would take. Their younger brothers would be at home, earlier in the day or evening repeating the same behaviour they pulled. Weird and saddening way to live your life, really.
At school, I went to the “best” school in the area. Miles away from home, up the more luxurious end of town. And y’know, “we” weren’t supposed to go there, not those of us from our end of town so myself and the two people who didn’t live in the normal catchment zone copped it there too. We copped it for not coming from families with money, we copped it for often being better spoken than the bullies, we copped it just for looking like we had two brain cells to rub together, we just copped it – I could rationalise a million reasons why but really, we just existed and for some reason, that was bad enough. Every break time someone would try it on, either cornering one of us in the grounds or just walking past hurling abuse or randomly slapping someone, anything to make us feel more uncomfortable.
At home that meant getting between my friends and my own house became a nightly chore of plotting routes, trying to plot safer routes. Do I go up past the flats, round the back of the shops and hope I can get through that way, all the time hoping they wouldn’t be at the shops? Do I go straight up the street and hope for the fastest route breaking into a run when I pass their house? Can I run fast enough tonight? Do I go down the avenue, up an alley, out the alley, across the road, into another alley, round the back and up again? How do I avoid making it look like this is the way I’m going to be going all the time because they would wait. They would be there. That’s just what they did.
At school, we grouped up. Safety in numbers. A disparate group of people who liked computer games, didn’t fit in with the rugby playing, football to your face not-like-us. Sometimes I’d sit and draw in the grounds, sitting somewhere fairly visible so if anything kicked off, I could just grab stuff and move on. I was a cheeky git, I’d answer back. Not smartly, bluntly. Sometimes if they cornered another lad, I’d walk up and tell them to shift it and move on. Sometimes I’d get a whack but at least the other lad could duck off. I was just something they couldn’t wrap their head round so I got it easier, not easy, it didn’t stop, just easier. Where easier is the difference between all the time, every break time and not all the time, every break time.
The school had no systems in place to deal with bullying and when the bullies were often “star pupils” who upped the prestige of the school, no interest in dealing with it either.
I managed the bullying, eventually, the day I left that school. When I walked out the door and I never had to speak to these people again, when I never had to face them again. I managed it. I managed it because it wasn’t happening anymore.
I managed the bullying at home by not being at home. I managed it by living elsewhere, by being elsewhere.
I still can’t see any other ways out. I didn’t really manage it, I endured it the whole time. And then one day, I wasn’t there for it to happen to and everything was better, I chose who I surrounded myself with and I surrounded myself with better people. Sometimes you can’t just make it stop but you can get through. And it’s knowing that there’s another side, knowing that it won’t happen forever, y’know?
It made me terribly unhappy for very long periods of time. Dealing with all this, it didn’t make me a better, stronger person. It didn’t break me, it didn’t make me. It was just this constant undercurrent of nastiness that I’d have to deal with, day in, day out. This constant hum of people trying to make me more miserable for no other reason than they decided to make me more miserable. It wasted my time, the time I spent plotting routes down the street, that was time I could have been doing something better. The time I spent dealing with abuse at school was time I could have spent doing something that made me happy instead. It’s time I should have been happier instead but someone wanted to take that from me. For a while, about 2 or 3 years, they did.
I don’t even hate them for it, I just feel terribly sad for them.
So I make videogames and people seem to like them. That’s great. It wasn’t quite what I’d planned, for some reason I once figured that being a rock star would be my best shot (OK, I was a teenager, I had plenty of reasons…) but turns out, it wasn’t really. And that’s OK. I think the videogames thing was probably for the best. I’ve met enough rock stars, I’ll stick with the flashing lights and underpants thing I have, not theirs.
I’m a carer, I don’t have the quietest of lives, it’s long hours, sometimes sleep is thin on the ground and it can be draining physically and financially but that’s OK too. Because I’m not the only person on the planet who deserves to be happy.
I have good friends out there in the real world, I’ve met a myriad of good and wonderful people through writing videogames too. I run one of the oldest indie related news sites on the net so I can cheer myself up whenever I choose by helping someone else get the word out about their work. That never fails. We have a small forum of people who’d pull their fingernails out if it meant it’d help someone else. I’m surrounded by good people on the internet, even my Twitter feed is full of the most wonderful people. I see what they do, every day, what they fight for, who they fight for and I’m happy to see that.
And I have a wonderful, wonderful family where every day, even when things have been hard (and they have been hard), every day there’s something to smile about.
I wake up, no matter what else is going on around me, I wake up safe. Always. There hasn’t been a day in the past 13 years where I haven’t woken up and had a laugh, where something hasn’t happened to cheer me up, to keep me pushing on. A few years back, I nearly shuffled off this planet due to illness and even then, with oxygen mask on, fighting to breathe, I smiled every day. We keep each other safe, we encourage each other to be what we can be, to be what we want to be. To be happy.
Anything else I’ve done, anything else I’ve achieved, it’s nothing compared to knowing you’re surrounded by people who want you to be happy. My life is immeasurably better for that and for five or so years in my teens, it seemed like the thing I could never have. Now I only have to think about the bullying when someone asks “Rob, were you ever bullied?” because everything else is OK.
I’m free.
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
No. There were times during the bullying where I couldn’t see an end in sight. Where I didn’t think it’d ever end. Where I didn’t think I’d ever get through it, where I didn’t see how I could get through it. When it’s every day, everywhere, and it’s all I knew, I couldn’t see outside of it.
Turns out though, yeah, you can get through it and the other side is much nicer too.
Make videogames. Go to your local library and ask them to stock a copy of this book. Or if you have ten pounds spare, buy a copy of the book. It’s the videogame equivalent of The Manual and that’s important to remember because The Manual is the best book on making videogames that isn’t about making videogames.
Or don’t. And make videogames anyway.
Just make videogames if that’s what you want to do because I want to play the videogames you make and I won’t be alone in that. Don’t let anybody tell you you can’t or shouldn’t make games. Of course you can and of course you should.
Find your voice. Make games. Be you.
What do you do now?
I’m a full time carer who makes videogames. In that order. Sometimes I’m helping someone else live their life to the fullest, other times I’m flashing lights in people’s faces whilst sitting around in my underwear. Both of these things are good things, both of these things make me happy.
Mark Kilborn
Name / Twitter handle:
Mark Kilborn / @markkilborn
What do you do now?
I work for Activision. I’m one of the Audio Directors for the Call of Duty franchise. I get to work on games that are heard by millions of people. I get paid to record weapons and vehicles, to make neat sounds, to work with musicians and voice actors. And I’m surrounded every day by people who are just as passionate about gaming as I am.
Birth place:
Santa Ana, CA
Where in the world are you now?
Madison, WI
What’s your favourite video game of all time?
Metal Gear Solid
What was the last game you enjoyed and why?
Papo & Yo. It dealt with subject matter so rarely touched by our industry. It’s refreshing to play games that deal with real world stories and problems, not just blowing things up.
Describe some of the bullying you experienced.
It manifested in various ways. Teasing due to my weight or being a “nerd” because I played video games (ironically even the so-called “cool” kids play them now). Occasionally there was a bit of physical intimidation. There were girls who pretended to like me, only to embarrass me when I reciprocated for the entertainment of their friends.
When did you manage the bullying?
Sometime around 8th to 10th grade, it’s been a while. The turning point was discovering that I was good at something. That allowed me to build confidence. By learning more about sound, learning an instrument and making music, I had something to value in myself. Bullies are largely effective because your self-worth is tied to the perceptions of others. When you take control of that and define your own self-worth, their taunts became far less effective. And when they’re ineffective, they get bored and move on.
What effect do you think bullying had on you?
It was a major turning point in my life. Had I not found that spark to build a fire of confidence, I can’t imagine where I’d be right now. I know it wouldn’t be good though.
How is your life better now?
It’s better in every way. I get paid to do what I love every day. I met a wonderful woman who also plays games, was a guitarist in a metal band, has tons of tattoos and a hilarious sense of humor. We have kids we love dearly. We collect video games and have almost 2,500 of them. I live in a nice house, drive a nice car… my life now is 100x better than it was in high school.
Some people look back on high school or college as the best years of their lives. For me, those years were just stressful periods on the way to a much happier life. The rest of my life will be the best years of my life.
Did you think your life was ever going to be this good?
Not when I was in the thick of it. I hoped it would be this good, but I didn’t think it was realistic. Looking back, it all seems perfectly realistic. I put in a lot of effort and I ended up with a great reward for it.
What would you like to say to a youngster thinking about getting into video games who is experiencing bullying right now?
I won’t lie to you, getting into the games industry is difficult, but it is realistic. You just have to focus and work hard. Work towards it in some small way every single day. Use whatever talents you have as a source for your confidence, and don’t worry about what others think of you. You determine your self worth, you determine your future. While they’re bullying people and being popular and doing whatever it is that bullies do, you focus on building a better life for yourself.
School is nothing like the outside world. Out here, all that matters is your abilities and your results. So if you invest in yourself and become amazing at what you want to do, you will find success and live the life you want.