David Crane (programmer)

Last updated
David Crane
David Crane (10453626776) (cropped).jpg
David Crane, 2013
Born1953or1954(age 69–70) [1]
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Game designer
Game programmer
Employer(s) Atari, Inc.
Activision
Known forCo-founder of Skyworks Interactive and Audacity Games
Notable work Pitfall!
Ghostbusters
Little Computer People
A Boy and His Blob

David Crane (born in Nappanee, Indiana, United States) is an American video game designer and programmer. Crane grew up fascinated by technology and went to DeVry Institute of Technology. Following college, he went to Silicon Valley and got his first job at National Semiconductor. Through his friend Alan Miller he learned about potential video game design work at Atari, Inc. and began work there in 1977.

Contents

After Crane and other programmers felt they were not being paid fairly at Atari, he left the company in 1979. Crane and Miller formed Activision, the first company to independently publish games for the Atari 2600. The company grew to be massively successful, with Crane's game Pitfall! (1982) being one the biggest sellers for the company. [2] Crane continued to work for Activison making several games for the Atari 2600 and later the Commodore 64. After Activision hired Bruce Davis as the new CEO, Crane left Activison and later joined Garry Kitchen at Absolute Entertainment. At Absolute, Crane began working on several games for the Atari 2600, Nintendo Entertainment System and Super Nintendo Entertainment System.

After Absolute closed in 1995, Crane formed Skyworks Technologies who would make browser games in the mid 1990s and was among the first developers of games that would later be known as advergames. While at Skyworks, Crane designed two of the companies biggest App store sellers with Arcade Bowling and Arcade Hoops Basketball . In the 2010s, Crane would develop games for AppStar for iPhone and iPad and by the end of the decade created Audacity Games, a company that would develop games for older consoles such as the Atari 2600.

Biography

Early life

David Crane was born in Nappanee, Indiana. [3] When he was young, Crane was fascinated by technology and engineering. He would dismantle a black and white television to create a channel tuner near his bedside and make a TV in a cabinet on his wall and create a laser that could ignite a match at the end of a workbench. He intended to work on making gadgets that would help people in their lives, but on reflection in 2010, he stated "Ironically, video game design was even a better fit for that combination of skills. But as I was growing up there was no such thing as a videogame, so how could I know?" [4] Crane's first encounter with a video game was with the Magnavox Odyssey that his parents bought him. He later admitted he was "bored by the rudimentary games" but was fascinated by the technology's potential. [5]

Crane first encountered a computer through a Boy Scout master who worked in data processing and began learning Hollerith code for punched cards. [4] [5] He attended a computer programming extension campus. [5] Once Crane graduated in 1972, he could code in three different programming languages. [5] [6] Crane went to the DeVry Institute of Technology in Phoenix, Arizona. [6] He completed the four-year course in 33 months and received his degree in electrical engineering. [7] [6]

National Semiconductor and Atari

Crane worked at Atari making games for their Atari 2600 system and was later tasked with assisting on building the operating system for their Atari 800 computer (pictured). Atari-800-Computer-FL.jpg
Crane worked at Atari making games for their Atari 2600 system and was later tasked with assisting on building the operating system for their Atari 800 computer (pictured).

Following college, he moved to Silicon Valley and got his first job at National Semiconductor in 1975. [5] [7] [6] At the company, he worked on linear integrated circuits in order to become proficient in electronic design. [8]

While playing tennis with Alan Miller, he was told by his friend that Atari was looking for game programmers. After proofreading a newspaper ad his friend had made for the position, Crane wrote a resume, was interviewed the next day at 10 am and had the job by 2 pm. [9] Crane joined Atari, Inc. in the third quarter of 1977 and first began producing Arcade-inspired titled such as Outlaw and Canyon Bomber for the Atari VCS (later known as the Atari 2600). [9] [7] Crane was initially unsure about programming games, but found he enjoyed microprocessor programming and game design. [8] Atari began their new line of computers with the Atari 800 and required help with software development. This led to Atari having all of its game designers, including Crane, step in to work on the machine's operating system. [8]

In 1979, Crane and other game developers at Atari, including Miller, Larry Kaplan, and Bob Whitehead received a memo indicating that their games were the most financially successful for Atari, making up $60 million of Atari's $100 million game cartridge sales in 1978. [9] [8] As they were making a salary of $30,000, they asked for a raise and, according to Crane, were told by Ray Kassar that Crane was "no more important to the success of those products than the person on the assembly line who puts them together." [9] [8]

Activision

Crane and Miller left Atari in August 1979. They had a plan to create an independent development and publishing company to produce games for Atari's VCS console, which had not been attempted previously. [2] Crane was suggested by a lawyer to Jim Levy in 1979. [3] Levy had been working for GRT Records and was raising money to go into business making cassette tape software and believed abilities in marketing and the business skills to help create their new company Activision. [2]

Initially working out of Crane's apartment, Miller and Crane began programming a development system for Activision. Whitehead and Kaplan would join shortly after. [2] Activision had a five-year business plan, to initially make video games during the slow growth of the home computer and switch over to computers in the future. [9] Activision's first games came out in 1980, including Crane's Dragster and Fishing Derby . [2] [10] The following year saw the release of Crane's other games Freeway while Crane would also contribute to other developer's games such as the code for the graphics in Kaplan's Kaboom! . [2] [11] In 1982, Activision released Crane's game Pitfall! which would be one the biggest sellers for the company. [2] [12]

Activision went public in 1983. Crane spoke positively about working at the company in the early 1980s, saying that due to their rapid success "everyone wanted to work [at Activsion]. [...] When Activision reached sales of $60 million, we had 60 employees. People have to work pretty hard for a company to have revenues of $1 million per employee." [2] Crane would follow up Pitfall! with two games: The Activision Decathlon (1983), which was developed with the impetus that the Olympics would be returning to the United States in 1984, and a sequel titled Pitfall II: Lost Caverns (1984). [13] Crane stated he made the sequel to Pitfall! "at a time when the Atari 2600 should have been replaced by a new gaming system." and designed a custom computer chip called the Display Processor Chip that was unique to Pitfall II: Lost Caverns. [14] [15] [16]

Following the video game crash of 1983 and the release of Pitfall II, Crane began focusing to transition into developing computer games at Activision. [9] [17] Crane felt the Commodore 64 had sold well enough to be a good platform to design games for. [17] The first game he made, Ghostbusters (1984) which was finished in six weeks using work Crane had been developing for a game called Car Wars. [18] [19] The game went on to become the Activision title that was received the most ports across consoles and home computers. [20] His next game, Little Computer People (1985) was a critical success while failing commercially. [21] Crane later said that "there was so much programming in [Little Computer People] that it cost more to produce than it made at retail. We had dozens of ideas for follow-up products, but if those ideas were going to lose money the company couldn't afford to produce them. I regret that we were unable to follow those ideas to see what might have become of the first large-scale simulated life form on a computer." [21] In 1985, Activision began the process of acquiring game company Infocom. As the deal was signed, Activision's board of directors replaced Levy and brought in Bruce Davis as the new CEO. [2] Crane would leave Activision in 1987 later explaining that Activision's management "had no creative vision at all, I left when I could no longer affect the future of the company." [22] He also noted a pay issue, saying that "the new president, Bruce Davis, asked me to take a fraction of my salary, with the rest made up through an incentive bonus. I asked him to put the bonus in clear terms in writing and he couldn't [...] He just slashed my salary without a compensating bonus. So I left." [9]

Absolute Entertainment

Following Activision, Crane worked independently, including finishing research work on a video game system for Hasbro. [2] [23] By January 1989, Crane became the Senior Designer at Absolute Entertainment, a company formed by former Activision staff member Garry Kitchen. [24] [25] At Absolute, Crane would work on titles for the Atari 2600, the Nintendo Entertainment System, and the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. Among these games at were Super Skateboardin', several games based on The Simpsons license, and two of his own creations: A Boy and his Blob (1990) and David Crane's Amazing Tennis (1992). [23]

Crane recalled in a 2005 interview with Frank Cifaldi that the team "had a lot of fun on the development side, but under the rule of Nintendo, the publishing side of the game business was really tough." [23] Crane said that to make any profit, the publisher had to predict how many games would sell in the market, saying that "If their estimate was off by 10% either way they were likely to lose money on the game." [23] Absolute closed in 1995. Crane recalled that "It was painful to close down Absolute, but the same was happening to small publishers all around the world." [25]

Skyworks Technologies

Following the demise of Absolute, Kitchen and Crane went into business making games that did not require inventory and began developing games for web browsers. Believing that audiences would be too afraid to give out information such as credit cards online, they developed a business model that would later be known as advergaming which involved allowing their games to be played for free while licensing them to companies to put on their websites. [25]

Among the games they developed built and launched Candystand for The Lifesavers Company. Crane and Skyworks would take a percentage of their promotions budget and built a place to play games. [26] [25] Crane and company would also develop a similar site to Candystand with ESPN. Crane called this "moderately successful arrangement, only limited by the learning curve of their salespeople who could never quite understand the difference between sponsorship and advertising." [27] While at Skyworks, Crane designed two of the company's biggest App store sellers with Arcade Bowling and Arcade Hoops Basketball . [28]

Later work

Garry Kitchen in 2013. Crane would work with Kitchen at several companies including Absolute Entertainment, AppStar, and Audacity Games. Garry Kitchen (10453626916).jpg
Garry Kitchen in 2013. Crane would work with Kitchen at several companies including Absolute Entertainment, AppStar, and Audacity Games.

In 2010, Crane and Kitchen began work at AppStar. Kitchen served as president and CEO while Crane was the company's chief technical officer. They published their first game, Iron Horse in 2010. [28] [29] Crane created a crowdfunding campaign Kickstarter in 2012 to fund a spiritual successor to the Pitfall!, which fell far short of his funding goal. [30] [31]

In the late 2010s, Crane and Kitchen created a company focused on hardware technology that would make cartridges and rom boards privately for development of Atari 2600 games. [32] Early in 2021, Crane, Garry Kitchen and his brother Dan Kitchen launching Audacity Games, a company dedicated to making new games for old consoles. Their first title was for the Atari 2600 with Circus Convoy. [7]

Legacy

IGN listed David Crane on their list of the top 100 game creators of all time at number 12. [33]

Personal life

Outside engineering and video game development, Crane was an avid tennis player. Crane had played tournament tennis for decades, as well as playing in doubles with Alan Miller. [32] While working at Absolute, Crane felt his video game career did not allow him to play enough tennis and enrolled at an expert tennis class at Cañada College. [32] Crane said that during his adult life, he performed at the rating of 5.0 on the NTRP (National Tennis Rating Program) scale, a standardized scale Crane described as being from 1.0 for beginner to "7.0 for Roger Federer". [34] In 2010, Crane said he still plays tennis in tournament league competitions, but due to age and injuries he is no longer at the 5.0 level. [34]

Despite his love for the sport, Crane stated he never had interest in developing a tennis-themed game until he began developing games for the Super Nintendo, specifically with David Crane's Amazing Tennis . [32]

Select works

YearGame titleRole
1978 Outlaw Lead designer [35]
1979 Canyon Bomber Developer [36] [37]
1979 Slot Machine Developer [36] [37]
1980 Dragster Conceiver, designer [38] [39]
1980 Fishing Derby Conceiver, designer [38] [40]
1981 Laser Blast Conceiver, designer [38] [41]
1981 Freeway Conceiver, designer [38] [42] [43]
1981 Kaboom! Graphics code [11] [43]
1982 Grand Prix Conceiver, designer [44] [45]
1982 Pitfall! Designer [46] [12]
1983 The Activision Decathlon Designer [47] [48]
1984 Pitfall II: Lost Caverns Designer [48] [49]
1984 Ghostbusters Developer [50] [51]
1985 Little Computer People Programming [52]
1986 Transformers: The Battle to Save the Earth Designer [53] [54]
1990 A Boy and His Blob: Trouble on Blobolonia Designer [55] [56]
1990 The Rescue of Princess Blobette Designer and program [57] [58]
1991 The Simpsons: Bart vs. the Space Mutants Additional programming [59] [60]
1991 The Simpsons: Bart vs. the World Additional programming and design [61] [60]
1991 Bart Simpson's Escape from Camp Deadly Program and design [62] [63]
1992 David Crane's Amazing Tennis Designer, programming [64] [65]

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Sources

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