09 Aug Women Create Games – Milan – Friday, September 13
And now for something completely different...
And now for something completely different...
Last week, I did a selection of lectures from the digital catalogue of Autodesk University (upcoming in October), but that included just events in the "Industry Talk" categories. This week, let's take a look at Case Studies. There's nothing like a practical success case if...
As my workshop with the Women in BIM group and my class at Autodesk University in San Diego approach, many of you asked me to provide additional resources on the LEGO Serious Play methodology, so here's a handful of them. Foundations and State of the Art ...
Well, I'm back from Nashville (I briefly mentioned it here), which means going back to work and back to business. I have a few things I need to do before a workshop on Monday, but it's a chilly Saturday morning here in Milan, coffee is...
This is going to be one of those rare posts in Italian: all my English-speaking friends should either chime out or hit that sweet “translate” button on your browser. It’s also going to be a post on American Football. Or not. Proceed at your own risk. Come...
I'm talking about the first one. The second one is...
If you haven't played this murder mystery, it's high time you start. And I don't care if the graphics look weird to you (they are), and if you suck at puzzles (I do): the game is a masterpiece in storytelling, the music kicks asses, and...
Do you like Lovecraftian atmospheres where you might be either going insane or possessed by the source of all evil? This videogame is for you, provided you like investigative plots. Developed by the Ukrainian studio Frogwares, who recently published a similarly-themed Sherlock Holmes game called The...
I don't like jump scares, as I already said, and this means that most of the horror videogames have me rolling my eyes. Every once in a while, however, a genuinely haunting piece of narration occurs and this often happens within a videogame of a...
You might be familiar with the fact that in the original versions of chess — the Persian hatranj and the Indian chaturanga — the overpowered omnipotent Queen was respectively the ferz, the counsellor, and the mantri, the general. Go figure, you might think. What you might be...