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Hi all,

I'll be teaching a tertiary level game development course over this coming summer. I'm looking for suggestions for a textbook. The course is aimed at 3rd-4th year students, most of whom are Computer Science students. While there is a reasonably strong programming requirement, the course looks at all aspects of the industry - design, marketing, art, coding, production and so on.

Any suggestions would be welcomed.

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so like... next summer? cause this summer is already here... or are you in Australia? – Ricket Jul 6 at 12:43
New Zealand, but close enough for most Americans :) – George Sealy Jul 7 at 10:20
Anytime people refer to Australia, New Zealand, or South Africa, my mind reads, "England but really far south and they drink more". – Ross Jul 7 at 21:55

2 Answers

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The Art of Game Design is a good choice for the actual art of designing a game (not necessarily video game) and the concepts it entails.

Game Design, Principles, Practice and Technique is a better choice for getting to know how video games are developed. Something like this plus a programming supplement provided by yourself should be a solid introduction to modern game design.

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Thanks for the feedback. The Art of Game Design has duly been ordered, it looks great! – George Sealy Jul 6 at 1:43
And now that it's here, I can thoroughly recommend it. The chapter on prototyping is worth getting the book for on its own. Definitely a good buy. – George Sealy Jul 27 at 8:25
Excellent, glad to hear. – Joey Robert Jul 27 at 13:56
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Game Architecture and Design was one of my course books for a degree in Games Computing (Software Development). I also had a few on OpenGL and Software Engineering (as the same principals apply).

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