Founder of his own game development company, Zoink Entertainment,
Klaus Lyngeled previously worked as game designer/artist for Shiny
Entertainment, where he designed the artwork for Sacrifice
and the game based on the film The Matrix, amongst other
prestigious game titles.
Challenge: Create a Working Game Demo
With Stunning Graphics
Klaus Lyngeled wanted to create a playable demo of his new game
concept, codenamed Core, and present it to a game publisher
to obtain financing for its production. Since the game was planned
for the Microsoft Xbox platform, Core needed to demonstrate
advanced gameplay and present stunning graphics.
Solution:
The Only Production Tool Accessible to a Non-Programmer
Klaus Lyngeled chose Virtools Dev 2.0 as his development solution,
since Virtools Dev 2.0 was the only tool with an exceptional and powerful
game engine accessible to a non-programmer. With Virtools Dev 2.0,
Klaus Lyngeled was able to create a first prototype of his project,
validating the graphical universe he had created by directly showing
it in action in under two months.
Once the prototype is finalized, Virtools Dev 2.0 SDK will allow
K. Lyngeled to create a programming team to continue developing
and optimizing needed features that are not available in the standard
behavioral user interface of Virtools Dev 2.0.
Key Benefits
Klaus Lyngeled was able to create a very impressive prototype of
his Core game quickly and without any outside assistance
- an impossible task with traditional development tools.
Having chosen Virtools Dev 2.0, K. Lyngeled will be able to use
the same tools for production as were used for prototyping, therefore
assuring a seamless transition from pre-production to final production.
This unique approach reduces production costs and delays that may
stem from using untested technology, and only Virtools Dev 2.0 provides
this important benefit in a traditionally high-risk domain.
- Seamless prototyping to production.
- New and optimized Features provided by the Virtools SDK
- Reduced production costs and risks