David Crane (programmer)

David Crane
Crane in 2013
Born1953 or 1954 (age 70–71)[1]
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Game designer
Game programmer
Employer(s)Atari, Inc.
Activision
Known forCo-founder of Skyworks Interactive and Audacity Games
Notable workPitfall!
Ghostbusters
Little Computer People
A Boy and His Blob

David Crane (born in Nappanee, Indiana, United States) is an American video game designer and programmer. Crane grew up fascinated by technology and went to DeVry Institute of Technology. Following college, he went to Silicon Valley and got his first job at National Semiconductor. Through his friend Alan Miller he learned about potential video game design work at Atari, Inc. and began work there in 1977.

After Crane and other programmers felt they were not being paid fairly at Atari, he left the company in 1979. Crane and Miller formed Activision, the first company to independently publish games for the Atari 2600. The company grew to be massively successful, with Crane's game Pitfall! (1982) being one the biggest sellers for the company.[2] Crane continued to work for Activison making several games for the Atari 2600 and later the Commodore 64. After Activision hired Bruce Davis as the new CEO, Crane left Activison and later joined Garry Kitchen at Absolute Entertainment. At Absolute, Crane began working on several games for the Atari 2600, Nintendo Entertainment System and Super Nintendo Entertainment System.

After Absolute closed in 1995, Crane formed Skyworks Technologies who would make browser games in the mid 1990s and was among the first developers of games that would later be known as advergames. While at Skyworks, Crane designed two of the companies biggest App store sellers with Arcade Bowling and Arcade Hoops Basketball. In the 2010s, Crane would develop games for AppStar for iPhone and iPad and by the end of the decade created Audacity Games, a company that would develop games for older consoles such as the Atari 2600.

  1. ^ "Pitfall Propels Creator to Celebrity Status". Detroit Free Press. 1983. p. 6E.
  2. ^ Fleming 2007.

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