Sunday 28 February 2010


Here is a video of a new Nintendo DSi game called, I think, Rittai Kakushi e Attakoreda (Hidden 3D Image: There It Is!). The built in camera tracks the players head and so as you tilt the machine the view changes. The result is incredible. Clever stuff.

Wednesday 24 February 2010

Say Hello To Nosy Crow

Nosy Crow is a new, independent publisher of Children's books, and in a exciting move they are also going to be developing apps too.

As someone who makes videogames for my day job, I see a great opportunity to get great stories, engaging characters and magical worlds in front of many adults and children by embracing these new toys.

A straight forward thing to do is to produce an animated version of the book such as Guess How Much I Love You which you could download straight to your mobile/iPod for 59p.

There is a opportunity to take children’s stories and bring them to life and add further depth to them by giving children the chance to take a role within the story and take on the choices and challenges that many a protagonist face. A good example of a puzzle game derived from a children’s story is ‘Gretel and Hansel’. The game itself is perhaps aimed at older children and adults, however the art style and simple nature of the gameplay illustrates what you can do with a story as your starting point – I’m sure I could make a pretty fun ‘Gruffalo’ game if Julia Donaldson let me :)

Another approach is to expand the universe within which the story takes place. My children have those beautiful flash cards designed by Eric Carle. I could animate the characters, add music and SFX, add a simple game mechanic that allows children to spell the names of the animals and I’ve got a flash card iPhone app which I’m able to push towards 37 million owners, at 59p a pop. What about a Mr Men advent calendar app which reveals a new character every day during December? Or a Cat-in-the-Hat jigsaw puzzle app?

What about episodic content? You can release chapter 1-5 for free, get your readers hooked then a couple of months later out comes chapters 6-10 for 59p. What about talking with your readers and use them to shape the stories as they develop. What about letting your characters live outside the book, with Twitter and Facebook? Attract your readers and keep them coming back. Brilliant.

Also there is a real opportunity for those who are currently unpublished, as the cost to develop for iPhone is cheap ( compared to Nintendo/Sony/MS) - £500 for a Mac Mini, and about £100 to join Apple’s development program. Here is a real chance for small independent publishers give the big boys a run for their money and reach a massive audience with many more stories.

Like I’ve said, this is pretty exciting stuff.

Saturday 20 February 2010

Pants That Fit


Here's the TV ad for Viva Pinata. A great game don't you know! Especially those trees ...

Sunday 14 February 2010

Cheesy I know. Well, not so much cheesy as chickeny. Friday evening was homemade chicken pie for dinner. So a quick snap with the camera and a quick doodle and I've got a got myself an appropriate picture for Valentines day! Saves me a fortune on all those cards and roses etc...

Wednesday 3 February 2010

I'm going to try to draw a new doodle everyday. Might prove too much, given work, the wife, the children, the writing, the washing up, the ironing, Silent Whitness, and everything else the requires my attention in the evenings. Anyway, this is today's effort...

Monday 1 February 2010

Slowly, but surely my story takes shape and I'm quite excited. I think I might have most of the right words in almost the right order. And to mark this occassion I have been over to Wordle and made some text-art!

Thanks to Angela, over at The Bookshelf Muse for spotting this fun little app.