Theresa Duringer spent the last three years of her life as an indie game developer. She thought that experience would be like a Lone Ranger. But she found that her world had become more interdependent than ever. In her journey, she found it takes a village to make a game. And that it is best tackled by tapping into the economy of favors, where indie devs help each other out. In her case, she was able to publish a 2D strategy game called Cannon Brawl on multiple platforms.
Duringer is but one in a million among indie game developers, each one of them trying to score hits with digital games. But she’s got a unique story about getting help from others, and she recently told it in a talk at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. I also interviewed her and discovered that her mother was a game developer as well. That’s a rarity in itself, having a parent, let alone a mother, as a game developer. The field of making games is only a few decades years old, so there aren’t that many multigenerational game development families yet. I felt like Duringer’s tale of survival and endurance — and her tips for fellow indies — were very instructive.
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My mom makes games
Duringer grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area and landed her first gaming job as a game tester at Electronic Arts, a giant game company where, in the late 1990s, her mother once worked as an administrative assistant. Maryann Klingman Duringer, Theresa’s mother, said that she fell in love with game production. She shared that passion for the creative process with her daughters. Klingman rose through the ranks and became a seasoned executive producer at places such as The Learning Co., PlayFirst, and Disney.
While growing up, Duringer enjoyed doing school projects. As she learned more from her mother, she felt like it was a good analogy for building a game, which required a lot of discipline, flexibility, ad hoc management, and an ability to convince others to believe in your project and get them to join you.
“To be a woman in game development was unusual in the ’90s, but Theresa didn’t know that,” said Klingman Duringer, in an email to GamesBeat. “As an extremely creative and intelligent girl engaged with technology, it was comfortable for Theresa to pursue a career in game development. What could honor a parent more than to have a child follow in their footsteps? To be a woman in game development is unusual. To have my daughter choose the same career is exciting.”
Klingman Duringer opened some doors for her daughter, mainly by virtue of the people she knew.
“My mom didn’t get me a job, but it was her network that helped,” Duringer said.
Duringer helped tutor the kids of one of her mother’s friends. That friend helped Duringer get a job managing focus groups for Zowie Intertainment, a Silicon Valley company that combined electronic sensors and toys in the late 1990s. Duringer didn’t set out to be a game developer, but she studied psychology at the University of California at Berkeley, and that helped her in her career in games.
“People are getting very excited about the intersection of psychology and gaming,” Duringer said. “The experiments we did in classes are a lot like video games.”
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Starting out as a tester, Duringer spent five years as a developer at EA’s Maxis division. She contributed to multiple games, including Spore, Sim City, Darkspore, Spore Galactic Adventures, and others. By the time she left, she was doing programming and graphic design with the online team.
With Spore, Duringer was able to create a kind of mini game on her own. She took the Spore applications programming interface, which enabled players to create their own games within the Spore universe, and created a game where players had to view a bunch of Spore creations and guess the tag word they had in common.
“It was the first game where I felt I had ownership,” she said. “It game me a lot of creative freedom, and it was impetus for me to break out as an indie.”
Becoming an indie
She left EA in 2011 and teamed up with coder and designer Pete Angstadt. She met Angstadt at Maxis, but he had since moved on the Havok. Angstadt created a prototype for a title called Dstroyd, a physics-based cannonball game which Duringer encouraged him to build. The idea was primarily Angstadt’s at that point. He entered it in a contest and won the Activision Independent Games Competition. That netted Angstadt a $175,000 prize, which enabled him to live in San Francisco.
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They both quit their jobs to become indies and work on the game full-time, and they formed a two-person studio called Turtle Sandbox in San Francisco.
“Pete came up with the name pretty quickly,” Duringer said. “If we had a little bit more time, we would have thought about that more.”
Duringer said she has always been a frugal person, and she had saved up a lot of money to survive as an indie.
The original game was very different. It involved shooting a cannonball that would arc around miniature worlds. They ultimately evolved that design to be much more like the game is today.
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Not a Lone Ranger
“When I embarked on this indie adventure, I thought I would be a lone ranger,” Duringer said. “When you think of indie, it evoked phrases like ‘self-reliant,’ ‘self-made,’ and ‘pulling yourself up by the bootstraps.’ But as I think, this common model of indie development as a solo adventure is less and less valid. There’s this hero narrative out there about the lone dev single-handedly crafting this masterpiece. This idea has been romanticized by the press. You’ll hear a story about a “garage” in the anecdote. It’s very easy to digest. But it’s not representative of what indie development is. It’s a misnomer. Right now, indie development is much more interdependent.”
For one, she had already teamed up with Angstadt to turn Dstroyd into Cannon Brawl. She was also the spawn of programmers. Her mother and father are both programmers, and so are her step dad and step brother.
“My mom has been a video game producer, and I think our story is really unique and uplifting,” Duringer said. “In a male dominated industry, I’ve seen my mom succeed and that has profoundly influenced my decisions in the pursuit of a development career. I’m really eager and excited to tell that story, and it’s also an easy story for me to tell.”
But Duringer didn’t just get help from an environment growing up with software developers or from working with a colleague. During the making of Cannon Brawl, she built up a lot of life debts because of the enormity of the task of delivering a high-quality game that competes with AAA titles from big companies.
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“I would argue that the bar has been raised,” Duringer said. “Demand is higher than ever. The developer community has risen to meet that demand and churned out more and more games. That makes it that much harder to stand out.”
Duringer and Angstadt had a good idea to help them stand out. In Cannon Brawl, you build an airship and a castle. Then you use your airship and other weapons to destroy the other person’s castle. The terrain is destructible, which creates some interesting tactical options like blowing out the foundation under your enemy’s castle.
You can set up goofy contraptions to cause your opponent grief, and you have to mine resources to get more offensive and defensive capability. It launched with 37 2D destructible maps, a single-player campaign with 20 missions and 10 puzzle levels, competitive online and local multiplayer modes, and seven multiplayer maps. It had 10 unlockable airships and 15 war machines such as cannon and lasers. That adds up to a beefy game. Both of them did nearly every task, but Angstadt did more of the programming and Duringer did more of the art. They used the XNA Framework and C Sharp.
“There was an enormous amount of content,” Duringer said. “We were very interested in making a deep game.”
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The economy of favors
They made the game over three years. But the process fundamentally changed the way that Duringer felt about what being an indie was really about. Duringer and Angstadt were able to pull it off because they were very resourceful.
Duringer found that “tribes are forming to create layers of support” that helps indies accomplish some of the same things that AAA companies do. One of those tribes is dubbed West Indies and Gamenest in the Bay Area, and there’s Glitch City in Los Angeles. Hacker Dojo, which isn’t game specific, is also a community of hackers and startups in Mountain View, Calif.
Game developers have to master a lot of disciplines, including programming, art, audio, and design. But to bring a game to market, they also have to know something about disciplines like the law, marketing, and other business issues.
“A lot of indies go indie because they want to avoid these business tasks,” Duringer said. “The irony is that they become personally saddled with them. These tribes are forming to establish tribes of pooled resources.”
At West Indies, one group does a weekly session where each developer talks about the progress they’ve made, partly to get feedback and help, and partly to foster accountability. By sharing resources and doing favors for each other, the indies can stretch a small budget much farther.
“You want your fellow tribe members to succeed,” Duringer said. “Success begets success.”
Some of the tribes are secretive. But Duringer said you can find them by showing your game at events like IndieCade or PAX. Development tool companies often seek out developers to show games which use the tools. Duringer often asks show organizers if she can show her game if other developers are no-shows. In that case, she’s turning it around and doing them a favor. She’s done other favors that help trade volunteer work in exchange for publicity for her game, including getting to the front page of livestreaming site Twitch.
She also said you can find out about tribes at shared workspaces. Companies such as Double Fine Productions, IGN, and Hacker Dojo operate some of these shared workspaces. You can also find birds of a feather at game jams, like Global Game Jam. And Duringer holds a game night at her house once a month to socialize with other game makers. One worker in a shared work space volunteered to port Cannon Brawl to Linux and Mac.
There are some downsides. Resources are finite. If you’re relying on volunteers, sometimes they will flake out or not do the work you wanted. Sometimes it makes sense to do revenue sharing with people whose help you really need. You can also credit them on your game. Duringer found that she had to relax control over people who were simply volunteering to do something, since they weren’t paid employees.
But on the plus side, the talent in the indie community has been on the rise. So the people doing favors for you are more useful.
“These tribes are popping up more and more, and part of the reason is there has been an exodus from AAA games,” she said. “They have exploded budgets and can’t afford to take the same risks. Indies can find space on the creative edges, and this is a good place for people who have become disillusioned with AAA.”
Cannon Brawl is not yet a giant success, but it’s doing pretty good. Duringer said the game did better than expected on Steam Early Access, and the ratings for the game were in the 90s on Steam. The title has been able to reach a worldwide audience. It has dedicated fans in Russia, for instance. That’s a rare accomplishment for a game made by two people.
“I think we would have done better if we had been able to build awareness,” she said. “People who play it tend to really like it. So we recently released a free demo, and that has helped lower the barrier to entry.”
While indies compete with each other, they can still find a lot of space to help out.
“Games are not a finite resource,” she said. “It’s not like we’re oil miners. If someone else takes less of the oil, there’s more for me. The pie is huge. And indies only need to sell a fraction of a fraction to be viable.”
The biggest problem for indies remains discoverability. They have to get out on social media and hype their games.
“Asking for help can seem like burden,” Duringer said. “I’ve become convinced that it’s always good to ask for help. It lets people know what you’re excited about working on and it opens a dialogue for exchange.”
Sometimes the favors are one way. On Cannon Brawl, a developer helped Duringer improve the explosions in her game.
Launching Cannon Brawl
The game launched last September. It is available on the PC via Steam, Linux, and Mac. Duringer is hoping to take it to more platforms, and she’s working on another title as well. Angstadt has moved on to another job, but Duringer hopes to find a way to port Cannon Brawl to new platforms. For her new game, she is doing the programming as well as the design and art.
And at the moment, she’s taking time to learn how to make a virtual reality game for the Oculus Rift, the immersive 3D goggles that is being built by Oculus VR, which Facebook acquired for $2 billion last year. Duringer said it felt good to take a break and give a talk at the GDC about all the help she received during her “school project,” and how she hopes to return favors as well.
Reflecting on the three-year project, Angstadt said, “With the enormous amount work it takes to ship an indie game, it was really great to have a co-founder as capable and talented as Theresa.”
Meanwhile, Duringer’s mother, Maryann Klingman Duringer, is happy with her daughter. Duringer said they play games all of the time and talk about game design.
“Several years ago, I was shopping at a Bay Area Apple Store and saw in the game section on a shelf not only a game Theresa had worked on at Maxis, but also games I had produced,” Klingman Duringer said. “It was a joy to see our products on the same shelf in an Apple Store. I felt excited for us and proud of my daughter.”