OTHER PROJECTS
PROJECT EULER
https://projecteuler.net/
That depends on your background. There are two tables containing problems. The Recent problems table lists the ten most recently published problems, so if you are new to Project Euler then you may prefer to start with the Archives to get a feel for the different types/difficulties of our problems. The first one-hundred or so problems are generally considered to be easier than the problems which follow. In the archives table you will be able to see how many people have solved each problem; as a general rule of thumb the more people that have solved it, the easier it is. To assist further there is a difficulty rating system which may also help you decide where to start. You are able to sort the problems in the archives table on ID, Solved By, or Difficulty.
LIFE IS STRANGE
Narrative Review 2017
Every year, leading game design programs at universities across the country integrate the GDC's Game Narrative Review competition into their academic curricula. Each participating student conducts a detailed structured analysis of the narrative elements of a game title of their choice. The resulting papers are submitted to the GDC writing board for review, and the submitters with the most promising entries are then invited to create a poster as a visual synopsis of their review. Successful poster submissions are declared winners and exhibited at the GDC.
SOUNDTRACK PORTFOLIO
Dec 2016
Create and edit soundscapes, atmosphere, and musical backgrounds for multimedia presentations using digital audio and MIDI software. Learn foundational techniques in composition, sound synthesis, looping, mixing, and sound effects application. Explore music copyright, royalty, and licensing procedures.
OVIS
May 2017
In the beginning, there was nothing and then there was DJ Jazzy Jax and DJ Jazzy Jax created the five colored sheep deities. The sheep then created the five large biomes of Ovis: Farmlands, Mountains, Plains, Sea, and Tundra. DJ Jazzy Jax then created the first humans and they spread far across Ovis and as they harnessed the lands they saw what the gods created and began worshiping them based on where they lived. Each human civilization remained isolated in their biome never visiting the others until a lone nomad, named Carl Windwalker, of the northern plains began traveling the world and seeing the other biomes. Carl walked large paths between the great temples which became major roads as more people traveled them. The civilizations then began trading goods, the farmers traded their crops, the fishermen traded their fish, the miners traded their ores, the nomads traded their horses, and the tribe traded their large ice blocks.