CircuitBreaker!

Hey all, we made a puzzle game called CircuitBreaker, and it made its way to the App Store last night!

It’s free, so give it a shot, and let me know what you think.

Here’s the marketing bit.

  • Over 150 levels
  • Three board sizes with increasing difficulty, from the fast-paced 5×5 to the challenging 9×11
  • Oh, and FREE level updates!

BONUS: The game is ad supported, and we’ll be donating a third of studio revenue for the rest of the year to Child’s Play, a charity that everyone in the studio is a big fan of.

Highborn preview

Touch Arcade has posted a glowing preview of Highborn, the lighthearted social strategy title I was working on with Jet Set Games (while I’m still contracting with Jet Set, I’m now spending most of my days over at the Instant Action game studio).

It’s exciting to see the game finally nearing release, and Joseph Hewitt, the lead designer on the project, has really done a hell of a job wrangling Highborn to completion. I’ll be showing off the title at E3, and giving away promo codes to bloggers and press, so hit me up if you’d like to see it for yourself.

Two days at Gilcrease

Hello, dear WordPress blog, I know I’ve been neglecting you lately, but, to be perfectly honest, I’ve been spending a lot of time with Tumblr. Yes, I know, everyone says she’s so easy, but she’s really great, honest, and always attracts such an interesting crowd. You’d like her too, I promise.

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Last week, an early morning electrical fire at Gilcrease Nature Sanctuary burned down the rehabilitation building, destroying the entire structure and killing over 200 parrots and other exotic birds. After the initial scramble to provide veterinary care and housing for the remaining birds, the frazzled team then had to handle the incoming donations (mostly cages and supplies) while caring for the hundreds of parrots still squawking away in the rest of the facility. A call for volunteers was made, and as I don’t start the new job (more on that later) until Tuesday, I spent the last couple days onsite.

Remains of the rehab building
The rehab building, after the fire. The tragedy is that many of the birds housed here were those with special needs, abusive pasts, and disabilities, birds that many of the staff had spent much of their time with to make their lives better. The team was crushed by the experience.

donations area
The donation and volunteer staging area. Members of the local community arrived throughout the day, delivering blankets, cages, and supplies.

Joe powerwashes
Joe, a frequent volunteer at Gilcrease, powerwashes donated cages. Once the cages were clean and ready to go, many became an immediate home, while the remainders were set aside for future inhabitants.

boneyard
Over the years, many of the damaged cages were collected in the back of the lot. Harold (another volunteer) and I spent an afternoon organizing them, separating salvageable cages from those that were too far gone to use.

Factoid: the Gilcrease land and surrounding area houses one of the largest known mammoth fossil sites, twice the density of the La Brea Tar Pits.

Cockatoo bowl
This is my bowl! Aside from hauling cages (and gaining a swell farmer’s tan), I got to meet (and clean up after) a whole group of amazing parrots.

my bowl!
You can’t have my bowl!

Jackie the raven
Jackie the raven, found and raised by a couple of construction workers and now living at the sanctuary, does that weird thing with her head again.

Babygirl
Babygirl wouldn’t sit still for her photo opportunity.

Pigeontopia
RescuePigeontopia!

Macaw aviary
It’s a trap! Macaws sit overhead in one of the flight aviaries. Tread carefully, here.

Macaw
Another macaw eyes me warily (and I, her) as I clean her cage. I’m accustomed to African Greys… Macaw beaks are huge.

Cockatoo
Cockatoos are like little babies. Cuddly, loud, maniacal little babies.

As one of the staff stated, out of the fire rises the phoenix, and, using a recently acquired grant, Gilcrease plans to rebuild much of the facility, using modern materials and installing sprinkler systems in all the buildings. The sanctuary will reopen to the public with a planned remembrance ceremony and arts festival on April 24th and 25th, 9:30am – 5:00pm.