Roberta Williams

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For the wife of gangster Carl Williams, see Roberta Kane.
Roberta Williams
Born February 16, 1953 (1953-02-16) (age 55)
Occupation Game designer
Spouse Ken Williams

Roberta Heuer Williams (born February 16, 1953) is a retired computer game designer. She is perhaps most famous for her pioneering work in graphical adventure games, particularly the King's Quest series.

In the eighties and nineties, Roberta and her husband, Ken Williams, were leading figures in the development of graphical adventure games. They founded the company On-Line Systems, which later became Sierra On-Line. Their contributions to gaming were partially chronicled in the book Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution.

Roberta Williams was instrumental in writing and designing several games, including the entire King's Quest series, Mixed-Up Mother Goose, and The Colonel's Bequest. Though Sierra was sold in 1996, Williams' production credits date to 1998.

Roberta posed for the cover of the game Softporn Adventure by Chuck Benton, published by On-line Systems. She also posed much later with her children as Mother Goose for the cover photograph of Mixed-Up Mother Goose. The end sequence of Leisure Suit Larry 3 features her as an in-game character.

Roberta and Ken married on November 4, 1972 when she was 19, and Ken just turned 18. They have two children, D.J. (b. 1973) and Chris (b. 1979). At present, the Williams family is living in a house they built in Mexico.

Since her retirement in 1998, she has stayed away from the public eye and rarely gives interviews to talk about her past with Sierra On-Line. However, in a 2006 interview,[1] she admitted that her favorite game she created was Phantasmagoria and not King's Quest, "If I could only pick one game, I would pick Phantasmagoria, as I enjoyed working on it immensely and it was so very challenging (and I love to be challenged!). However, in my heart, I will always love the King’s Quest series and, especially, King’s Quest I, since it was the game that really 'made' Sierra On-Line."

Williams has often stated that her games are explicitly targeted toward a more affluent and educated audience than other games, raising criticisms of elitism. In a 1999 Gamer's Depot interview, she summed up her feelings:

Back when I got started, which sounds like ancient history, back then the demographics of people who were into computer games, was totally different, in my opinion, than they are today. Back then, computers were more expensive, which made them more exclusive to people who were maybe at a certain income level, or education level. So the people that played computer games 15 years ago were that type of person. They probably didn't watch television as much, and the instant gratification era hadn't quite grown the way it has lately. I think in the last 5 or 6 years, the demographics have really changed, now this is my opinion, because computers are less expensive so more people can afford them. More "average" people now feel they should own one.[2]

In a 2006 interview, Williams said that designing computer games is in the past for her now and that she intends to write a historical novel.[1]

[edit] Works

The cover of Mixed-Up Mother Goose with Roberta Williams (seated) as Mother Goose
The cover of Mixed-Up Mother Goose with Roberta Williams (seated) as Mother Goose

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Adventure Classic Gaming (2006). Roberta Williams Interview.
  2. ^ Gamer's Depot (1999). Roberta Williams Interview.

[edit] External links