Misplaced Pages

Cliff Johnson (game designer): Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →
Revision as of 02:14, 8 July 2006 editThefool (talk | contribs)300 edits correct spelling of Leatrice← Previous edit Revision as of 15:55, 31 July 2006 edit undoNishkid64 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users51,999 editsm moved Cliff Johnson to Cliff Johnson (game designer): There are two Cliff Johnson's.Next edit →
(No difference)

Revision as of 15:55, 31 July 2006

File:Cliff-Johnson.jpg
Cliff Johnson, 2006

Cliff Johnson (born 1953) is an American game designer, best known for the early computer puzzle games The Fool's Errand (1987 Game of the Year) and 3 in Three (1990). Both games were notable for unique visual puzzles and a metapuzzle structure.

Biography

Johnson was born August 14, 1953 in Hanover, New Hampshire, the only child of Norman and Leatrice Johnson. He attended Bristol Eastern High School, which is where he started making Super 8 movies. In 1972, he had jobs "building monsters" for five different amusement parks, and then later he attended University of Southern California's film school, where he became a teaching assistant in animation, and created some of the Monty Pythonesque animations for Nickelodeon's television series Out of Control.

In 1984, using his first computer, a 512 KiB so-called "Fat" Mac, he learned to program, and created his first game, The Fool's Errand, which in 1987 won "Best Puzzle Game of the Year" from GAMES Magazine, and was declared "Best Retro Game Ever" by British GamesTM magazine.

From 1990-1995, he directed the *FunHouse* production group for Philips Media, and from 1996-2001, he consulted with Mattel, Warner Bros. and Disney for online puzzles and treasure hunts.

In 2002, Johnson designed the $100,000 Challenge for the book Mysterious Stranger by street magician David Blaine. It was solved in 2004.

Johnson presently lives in Canada with his wife, and since 2003 has been working on a sequel to The Fool's Errand, called The Fool and His Money.

Authored games

Other contributed works

References


Template:Persondata

Categories: