Bruce Shelley

American video game designer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican video game designer
A.K.A.Bruce Campbell Shelley
A.K.A.Bruce Campbell Shelley
PlacesUnited States of America
isPublisher Game designer Video game developer
Work fieldBusiness Creativity Gaming Journalism Technology
Gender
Male
BirthMichigan, USA
The details

Biography

Bruce Shelley at the 2017 Game Developers Conference

Bruce Campbell Shelley is a board and video game designer. He is primarily associated as the co-designer of the video games Railroad Tycoon and Civilization with Sid Meier, and later the Age of Empires series.

Shelley had worked with Avalon Hill to develop a number of board games for the company, including 1830: The Game of Railroads and Robber Barons, inspired by Francis Tresham's railroad-based game 1829. Around 1988, Shelley recognized that the board game market was weakening against the growing video game market, and was able to get a position at Meier's Microprose. Shelley soon became Meier's direct assistant to designing new video games, several of which were inspired by Shelley's past board game experience. Their first collaboration, Railroad Tycoon, was partially based on Shelley's work on 1830. Subsequently, the two worked together to create Civilization.

Shelley got married and his wife found a job with a good salary in Chicago. The person who hired Shelley left the company after one year and gradually Shelley become one of the lowest paid coworkers in MicroProse. Due to these developments, as well as a changing atmosphere at Microprose, Shelley left the company by the end of 1992 and later joined Ensemble Studios. There, he brought ideas from Civilization and led the development of the early titles in the Age of Empires series, first released in 1997. Through fellow designers Brian Reynolds and Dave Pottinger, Shelley has also worked for games with Zynga. He is currently working with a Texas-based company known as Bonusxp.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 07 Feb 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.