Australian Game Developers Conference

Summary


The Australian Game Developers Conference (AGDC) was an annual conference held from 1999 to 2005 that brought together Australian and overseas game developers, publishers, programmers, artists, production staff, computer graphics companies, audio companies, software tool developers, buyers and suppliers to the game development industry. It was owned by the Academy of Interactive Entertainment (AIE) and was run by Interactive Entertainment Events, a subsidiary of AIE.

History edit

The inaugural conference was held in Sydney, New South Wales, in 1999. Due to enormous financial support provided by Multimedia Victoria, the conference was held in Melbourne, Victoria, from 2000 to 2005.

The conference program regularly featured:

  • Trade Exhibition
  • Schools & Computer Games Academic Summit
  • Pitch to Publishers Day
  • VIP and Delegate networking functions
  • Up to seven concurrent conference sessions
  • Keynote presentations
  • The Australian Game Developer Awards

Speakers edit

International keynote speakers included:[1]

Ian Livingstone - Eidos (UK); Ray Muzyka - Bioware Corp. (Canada); Rob Pardo - Blizzard Entertainment (USA) and Aaron Lieberman - Bungie (USA); Jason Rubin, ex-President, Naughty Dog, Inc. (USA); Bill RoperFlagship Studios (USA), Laura Fryer, Microsoft Xbox (USA); Ian Fischer, Ensemble Studios; Seamus Blackley, Capital Entertainment Group Inc.; Phil Harrison, Sony Computer Entertainment Europe; Dave Campbell, Discreet; and Lars Gustavsson, DICE.

2005: Final AGDC edit

On the last day of conference proceedings in December 2005, Founder of the Australian Game Developers Conference, John De Margheriti, issued a press release announcing that AIE would stop running the premier industry conference event to allow the industry association, the Game Developers Association of Australia (GDAA), to build a brand new industry conference.[2]

Other Australian industry conferences edit

Other Australian Industry conferences include:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Australian Game Developers Conference, Official Handbooks 2002, 2003, 2004 & 2005
  2. ^ The 7th and final Australian Game Developers Conference (2 December 2005), Press Release, AGDC

External links edit

  • "The 7th Annual Australian Game Developers Conference". The Australian Game Developers Conference. 2005. Archived from the original on 18 May 2022.