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WildWorks, Inc. [1] (formerly Smart Bomb Interactive) is an American game development studio based in Salt Lake City, Utah.The studio was assembled from game industry veterans, co-founded by Kris Johnson, Clark Stacey, and Jeff Amis (Johnson and Stacey were previously a part of the studio Beyond Games).
One of which is a series of toys called "Animal Jam Adopt-a-Pet" which comes with a miniature figure of a pet from the game and two accessories in a den shaped box, along with an in-game item code. Since the release, four series of toys have been released so far, featuring different pets, accessories, and dens.
People vote and receive the prototype for a fee, making the event an example of commercial game jam. Game jams have also been held to promote products and companies. [6] Experience economy – Game jams were held on train, sea, and air travels, and at locations such as cabins without ample water and electricity infrastructures and castles ...
This category is for video games initially developed in the course of a game jam, a day-to-week long period where developers build a game from scratch into a near-completed state. Games in this category may either be those as originally made during the game jam, or expanded out to a fuller release after the game jam's completion.
The Jam, which allows development teams, private source code and extended development time of 72 hours, takes place concurrently with the solo competition ("Compo"). [16] From early in the game jam's history until 2016, a smaller competition called "Mini Ludum Dare" or "MiniLD" was held during months without a main Ludum Dare competition. [19]
The Indie Game Jam (IGJ) was an effort to rapidly prototype video game designs and inject new ideas into the game industry. Started in 2002 by a group of game designer- programmers , the event featured a shared game engine technology and worked on by other designer-programmers for a single long weekend.
The game is similar in concept to Jungle Party, with robot based mini-games in a space-themed environment. One of the main differences between Jungle Party and Robo Jam is the introduction of AI, allowing players to play against the computer. Unlike Jungle Party there is no solo game mode. A full game can be played with only one human player ...
Jam City was founded by the Myspace co-founders Chris DeWolfe, Colin Digiaro and Aber Whitcomb, and former 20th Century Fox executive Josh Yguado. [4] [5] [6] The company launched in 2010 when the co-founders raised US$28 million from Austin Ventures for their business, then called Platform G. [4] [7] Platform G acquired MindJolt, a social gaming platform founded by Richard Fields, in March ...