Ever wanted to create your own game?
14 08 2006Now you can, as Microsoft is to offer a consumer version of professional tools used to develop videogames for the Xbox 360.
The software will let non-professionals develop titles and then share them via the Xbox Live online service.
Microsoft executive Peter Moore said: “It’s our first step of creating a YouTube for videogames.”
The program will seek to complement a trend that has seen videogames becoming more like film blockbusters, costing up to £20m to produce.
Users will need a PC running Windows XP - or Vista in the future - to operate the tools program, called XNA Game Studio Express.
The tools will be available in trial form from 20 August and there is a $99 (£55) annual subscription.
Mr Moore said the program was basic compared to the pro tools, which cost tens of thousands of dollars.
Some basic program skills were still going to be needed for the consumer version if successful titles were to be developed, he said.
Mr Moore said the games users would be able to make would be rudimentary.
He said future plans may include additional software packs that consumers could buy to tweak their games.
Microsoft would regulate the content for appropriateness and intellectual property issues, but users would own their work, Mr Moore said.
“I’d love to send a royalty cheque to a kid,” he said.
YouTube has become an enormously popular website for video clips - many of which are filmed by users themselves.
Last month YouTube reported that users watched more than 100 million videos per day.
Microsoft said more than 10 US universities, including the University of Southern California and Southern Methodist University, will include XNA Game Studio Express and Xbox 360 development in their curriculum.



Wow, cool, now I can make a game in which a man walks across the TV over and over again unless you kill him by pressing “Y”.