Daisuke Amaya

Daisuke Amaya

A Japanese man gestures in front of a podium.

Born (1977-04-29) April 29, 1977
Ono, Fukui, Japan
Nationality Japanese
Other names Pixel
Occupation Video game developer
Known for Cave Story

Daisuke Amaya (Japanese: 天谷 大輔, Hepburn: Amaya Daisuke, born April 29, 1977), also known by his art name Pixel, is a Japanese indie game developer. He is best known for developing Cave Story (洞窟物語, Dōkutsu Monogatari), which has been remade into many versions.

Games

His most popular work, Cave Story, is a freeware PC platform game released in 2004 that was created entirely by himself over the period of five years. The game received widespread praise from critics[1][2][3] and in July 2006 appeared at the top of Super PLAY's list of the 50 best freeware games of all time.[4]

Amaya's other work includes the game Ikachan which he released in 2000, as well as many other low-profile games. His current projects, if any, are unknown. Before working on Kero Blaster, he was working on a game titled "Rockfish", which was intended to be finished sometime in 2012.[5] The project was put on indefinite hiatus, and was likely canceled. Amaya was credited with the story concept for Nicklas Nygren's NightSky.[6] In May 2014, Amaya released Kero Blaster, a side-scrolling platform shooter game. This game was Amaya's first major work since the release of Cave Story.[7] In October 2015, Amaya updated Kero Blaster, under the name Kero Blaster ZANGYOU mode, featuring a new story, levels, and overall greater difficulty.[8]

Audio software

Amaya has created various audio and music composition software. All his music composition software uses a piano roll editing interface.

Org Maker is the software used to create music for the lightweight .org format, which was used in Cave Story.

He is continuously developing the successor to Org Maker, the freeware audio editing suite PxTone. Users can create their own audio samples and compose music using PxTone Collage.

Gameography

References

  1. Sharkey, Scott (2005-02-02). "Freeloader: Doukutsu Monogatari". 1UP.com. Retrieved 2009-05-21.
  2. Park, Eddie (2005-10-12). "Doukutsu Monogatari Freeware Available". Inside Mac Games. Archived from the original on 2009-01-08. Retrieved 2009-05-21.
  3. "The Rise and Fall (and Rise?) of Japan". Electronic Gaming Monthly: 63. September 2008.
  4. "Gratis Topp 50". Super PLAY: 118–121. July 2006.
  5. Amaya, Daisuke. 開発. 開発 (in Japanese). 開発室 Pixel. Archived from the original on October 17, 2011. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  6. Nicalis (January 6, 2011). NightSky. Windows. Level/area: Credits. Story Concept / Daisuke Amaya
  7. Farokhmanesh, Megan (31 March 2014). "Cave Story dev's new game, Kero Blaster, launches May 11". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  8. Musgrave, Shaun (12 October 2015). "Studio Pixel Releases Update To 'Kero Blaster' And New Companion Game 'Pink Heaven'". toucharcade. TouchArcade.com LLC. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.