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Bennett Foddy is an Australian video game designer based in New York. Raised in Australia and trained as a moral philosopher on topics of drug addiction , Foddy was a bassist in the electronic music group Cut Copy and a hobbyist game designer while he finished his dissertation.
Foddy in 2009 Spurred by his interest in video game history and by the advancement and accessibility of video game emulators —in particular, the combination of MAME and Multi-Emulator Super System — Bennett Foddy sought to curate a selections from a series of video games across multiple platforms with no setup in-between.
Released as free software in 2004 BSD-3-Clause (since OpenMPT 1.17.02.53) / GPL-2.0-or-later, partly public domain: SoundTracker: Yes No Yes No Fast Tracker clone GPL-2.0-or-later: SunVox: Alexander Zolotov Yes Yes Yes Yes Also runs on Windows CE. Proprietary (Music Creation Studio) BSD-3-Clause (Engine) Noise Station: Mark Sheeky No No No Yes ...
Bennett Foddy, QWOP 's creator, at Fondation Brocher in October 2009. QWOP was created in November 2008 by Bennett Foddy for his site Foddy.net, when Foddy was a deputy director and senior research fellow of the Programme on the Ethics of the New Biosciences, The Oxford Martin School, part of the University of Oxford.
A Steam version of the game was later released by Foddy on December 6, 2017, [2] [3] with a release on iOS that same day. [4] The Android version was later released on April 25, 2018. [5] The Linux version was available for beta testing in August 2018 and received a stable release in the same year. [6]
Mixxx is a DJ Automation and digital DJ performance application [6] and includes many features common to digital DJ solutions as well as some unique ones: It natively supports advanced MIDI and HID DJ controllers, is licensed under the GPL-2.0-or-later and runs on all major desktop operating systems. [7]
The software works with DJ controllers from various manufacturers, including Pioneer DJ, Denon DJ, and Roland. [2] In 2018 Serato changed the names of its DJ software from Serato DJ to Serato DJ Pro, and from Serato DJ Intro to Serato DJ Lite. [8] The new versions use 64-bit software architecture. [9]
[8] [9] Development on Ape Out began when Cuzzillo attended game development courses at New York University (NYU), where he also worked on an independent study with Bennett Foddy. [8] Foddy contributed to the game's art, while Matt Boch, an associate professor for NYU's Game Center, worked on the game's music system and sound design. [10]