Yesterday, we outlined the keynote speakers and sessions which are on offer in Edinburgh. Now it’s Dare’s turn.
The indie festival is offering quite a lot.
There’s a two day conference focusing on useful and practical advice for new, independent developers, with speakers including…
- Gavin Shields from Turbulenz (Awesome company. You should speak to them)
- Chris Wright from Games Analytics (No matter what you say about analytics, this is something you *will* need to understand. Now stop snivelling, suck it up and listen to the man)
- Andrew Smith from Spilt Milk Studios (The nicest man in indie development. Also: clever)
- Hilmur Veigur Petursson from CCP (Eve Online! Space ships! No orcs! Yay! Madly fascinating…)
- Richard Scott from Axis Animation (You’ve seen their stuff and gone ‘ooooh!’)
- Colin Macdonald from Channel 4 (local lad, done good, now has budget and wants to hear from genuinely, properly creative and clever developers)
- Simon Harris from BBC (the BBC!)
Plus there’s a BAFTA Games Question Time, featuring genial host, Johnny Minkley and a stellar line up of astonishingly interesting and fascinating guests.
All of which makes it entirely worth the measly £20, which you can pick up until the 26th of July. After which it becomes even better value, at £30. Or you can add on a one day HTML5 workshop, led by the affable and expert Martin Beeby from Microsoft UK, for another £10.
Even the most wretched, penny-pinching, miserable, stay-at-home ‘we’re too busy’ developer can spare an afternoon out of the office for a line up like that. At the very least you can go and see Brian Baglow, who’s performance in Brighton was consistently rated higher than that of Madonna at her recent Scottish date (we believe he was asked to step in as the support act, but was ‘too busy’ and ‘couldn’t get to Edinburgh after dark’).
Plus there will be drinks, networking, friends, good times, sandwiches and the future course of the entire interactive industry will be plotted, agreed and set in motion.
There’s even a UKIE tax break consultation workshop taking place, so you can get proper, grown-up business advice there too. Not to mention all of the developers, studios and awesome people involved with the Dare judging and mentoring scheme will also be present, so it’s going to be a who’s who of who’s not in Edinburgh (but is in games).
Be there, or be forever consigned to the uninteresting and irrelevant end of the interactive spectrum.