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I misread the title of this question. I thought this an equally interesting question. I'm sure that as programmers, you occasionally encounter software that makes you contemplate what it took to write it.

Please skip the obvious examples. I'm sure plenty of people are impressed by Linus Torvalds, but that's a rather boring example.

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There are tons of questions like this already on SO. – Robert S. Dec 3 '08 at 17:04
It's fine to close this as a duplicate...as long as you provide a link to an open duplicate of the question. – Brian Dec 3 '08 at 17:15
Dupe of stackoverflow.com/questions/9545/… – Robert S. Dec 3 '08 at 18:01
I disagree that this is a dupe of that, considering that that particular question is primarily focusing on famous people, whereas this is focusing mostly on games which had not-necessarily-famous people working on them. However, I don't like open/close wars, so I won't reopen myself. – Brian Dec 3 '08 at 18:48
@Brian, I see "or other software" in the title. The other thread focuses on programmers you admire, which would be people like game developers (Carmack for example). You could roll back the title to just game programmers and make it a wiki, then it will survive. – Robert S. Dec 3 '08 at 19:56

closed as exact duplicate by Robert S. Dec 3 '08 at 18:01

7 Answers

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I remember being bowled over by the AI in the original Half-Life. It really advanced the state of the art, much as Steve Polge's ReaperBot did for the original Quake. Graphics-wise, John Carmack and Tim Sweeney have really impressed me, but Carmack gets extra kudos for open-sourcing his codebases a few years after the games are released.

For sheer addiction factor, I really admire Eugene Jarvis' Robotron 2084 and Defender, as well as Alexei Pajitnov's Tetris.

It seems like nowadays development teams are more admired than individual coders or publishing houses - certainly a change from my youth :) I guess modern game development has become so complex that it's increasingly rare that a single coder can make an impact. (A pleasant exception would be Jonathan Blow's Braid on Xbox Live Arcade.) Hopefully Microsoft's XNA Game Studio will have a democratising impact and there will be a return of 'bedroom coders' producing interesting and challenging output.

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Guild Wars. It's always been super-stable; It just feels like it's running on a really clean code base. (Lately it's been overzealous about level-of-detail, but I'm still impressed.)

Portal was more impressive to me as a creative feat. Adapting portal 3d engines to be more dynamic was really cool, but the coding aspect of that didn't jump out at me.

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Recently: Water effects and AI on BioShock

A while ago: Wolfenstein 3D on a friend's 386, for being the first 3D game that I looked realistic (in 1992 it looked realistic to me!)

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Elite.

Quite apart from being a classic, it was also:

  • The first proper 3D game.
  • An amazing example of procedural generation of game content.
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Video games:

  • Portal for sheer poetic beauty
  • Elite2 for most content on one 3.5" diskette

Other software:

  • VPinMame for combining emulation and simulation
  • Reason from propellerheads for it's user interface
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Personally, I found the approach to programming in Battle for Wesnoth worthy of respect.

A game that really amazed me was Garden of Coloured Lights . The way the sound and gameplay were mixed together impressed me a lot, though I admit that doing this successfully was probably not so much about clever coding.

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I think Spores is something that might be cool to look into.

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