Harrison hints at PlayStation 3 homebrew plans
Sony Worldwide Studios boss Phil Harrison has said the company would like to further open PlayStation 3 up to independent game developers in the future.
"I fully support the notion of game development at home using powerful tools available to anyone," Harrison said in an interview with
Slashdot.
"We were one of the first companies to recognise this in 1996 with Net Yaroze on PS1. It's a vital, crucial aspect of the future growth of our industry."
Harrison went on to note that his involvement with games began in the 1980s as he tinkered with Commodore 64 games that appeared in magazines. "You'd spend hours typing in the code, line-by-line, and then countless hours debugging it to make it work and then you'd realise the game was rubbish after all that effort!
"The next step was to re-write aspects of the game to change the graphics, the sound, the control system or the speed of the gameplay until you'd created something completely new."
But he admits that these days the doors into the industry that might be opened by going through that process "are largely closed by the nature of the videogame systems themselves being closed".
Read the full article here...Tom Bramwell
April 23, 2007
Source: GamesIndustry.biz