Making a App: One Game Maker’s Success Story

Naomi Kobuko was an experienced business woman. She and her husband were running a game development company called LavaMind. He did the games, she took care of the business side. That is, until she decided she wanted to make a game, too. She knew nothing about how to do it. This is the story of how she learned.

naomi kobuko
Image courtesy Naomi Kobuko

Naomi explains how she got started learning what she needed to know:

“I didn’t even know how APIs really worked,” said Naomi. “I used to blank out when anyone talked tech to me. I’d worked in the game business, but I was never one to code.”

“The thing that helped me the most was the community. I stumbled upon the computer language Lua and joined the Corona Labs community. As soon as I plugged into the forums, I felt connected, and I began to suck up knowledge. Whenever I got stuck, someone always posted something that helped me get over the hurdles.”

About a year later, Naomi completed her first game and is now the one helping newbie coders. Her game is called Beetle Bounce.


Image courtesy of LavaMind.

More than just a finished game that works on iOS and Android, it was a Top Game Pick on Nook and she was getting offers of marketing money backing.

I was fascinated by Naomi’s story of how she learned with the help of a supportive community and wanted to know more about her background. She answered a few questions for me.

Q: Can you explain your background?

A: I’ve actually had a varied career. I grew up in a small farming village in Japan. My father was a Christian pastor, which is quite unusual in Northern Japan.

I went to college in Tokyo at ICU (International Christian University). When I graduated, I worked as a financial analyst for
Morgan Stanley. Then I moved to the United States to be with my husband, and I worked in real estate.

Real estate wasn’t my thing, so I began translating for TV and film productions, and I wound up coordinating international film productions. That was a blast. I also worked translating manga (Japanese comic books) into English. I’ve translated some volumes from popular series, including “Naruto” and the “The Ring”.

Around the same time, I partnered with my husband to form LavaMind. My husband did all the coding on our first games, while I did the graphics, sound and helped manage the business. Our first game was Gazillionaire, and it was successful. So we did two more business simulation games: one called Zapitalism, and another called Profitania. These are very popular for teaching kids and adults entrepreneurship and money management. After this I worked for several startups doing business and finance.

After this, I wanted to work from home again, but I couldn’t justify hiring an engineer. It’s so expensive in San Francisco and games are risky business, so I began to teach myself to code. After a year of hard work, I’d completed Beetle Bounce.

Q: What age group is Beetle Bounce for and what’s it about?

A: I designed a game that I wanted to play myself, so I’d say it’s primarily for women (and men) who like casual games, like Peggle, Zuma, and Tetris. That said, it seems to appeal to everyone. It’s easy to play and action-packed, so even kids get into it. Girls love it!

Q: It sounds like you did this single-handedly with just help from the online forums at Corona Labs. That’s amazing to me. Are you planning to do your second game the same way?

A: Yes, I did it all myself. I like the freedom of working for myself and not being reliant on anyone else. It’s completely liberating. I had so many jobs where I had to be in an office and rush around to meetings, which is difficult when you have two boys. I really enjoy working for myself at my own pace. I also love the freedom to create whatever I feel like making. I plan to continue creating new, original games as long as my brain is still sharp!

Q: Do you blog somewhere?

A: Yes, I actually run a blog called Founders Space. It’s quite popular with startups and small businesses. That’s my main blog. LavaMind is on Twitter, too, @lavamind.

More Resources for Making a Game Yourself

Other moms who have a great idea for a game but need help with learning how to make it a reality may want to check out the community forums at Corona Labs that helped Naomi so much.

The community at Moms with Apps is also very helpful. Recently Moms with Apps published Resources for Beginning Programmers. They asked,

If you want to build an app from the ground up, and you aren’t a computer programmer, where do you start?

The resources suggested by that community are listed in the article, with Corona among other helpful sites named by mom app developers.

For someone with an idea and an interest, making a popular game that can be sold in the mobile marketplace is definitely possible. Naomi Kobuko did it, and you can, too.

[Note: Cross-posted at BlogHer.]

Women in Tech: Can You Help Find a Few Good Men, Part II

Earlier this week, I posted Women in Tech: Can You Help Find a Few Good Men? In that post, I suggested that perhaps we should offer praise to the men and events in tech that treat women as equals and with respect instead of pointing the finger of blame at the men and events in tech who treat women as unworthy or only for sexual objectification or exploitation.

I offered to start a new site and manage it once it was running to keep track of the outpouring of praise that I envisioned. After all, I knew it could be done because I could offer names and events where women were given equal opportunity to be tech stars.

Well. Days have passed. And there’s been no outpouring of praise or offers to submit praise. One commenter here, Ashe Dryden, said she’d be willing to pass along stories from her conference travels. One Twitter friend, @cdharrison, said he knew a praiseworthy tech dude and would be willing to write about him. That’s the grand total of people who are willing to praise the men and events in tech. 

Okay, I exaggerated with that last sentence. I’m sure there are more than two people who could find something good to say about something or someone. But I didn’t hear from them. That convinces me that a new site dedicated to pointing out the good guys and the women-friendly events isn’t feasible.

Here’s what I suggest as an alternative. I create a category here on this blog called something like “Good Guys in Tech” (feel free to offer a better category name). If someone sends me a paragraph or two, tweets me an image from an event, or in some way lets me know about the dude or the happening that is worth praise, I’ll post it here and put it in that blog category.

Could I have some feedback on this, please? Will there be participation?

Women in Tech: Can You Help Find a Few Good Men?

We know the situation is bad for women in tech. See the Timeline of Incidents on the Geek Feminism Wiki, the Tumblr blog Programmers Being Dicks,  Dell Conference Moderator Fails to Amuse Women, and Here’s Hoping. I could go on, but you already know this stuff. Naming names, pointing fingers, and listing offenses are important in raising awareness. But not much is changing.

It occurs to me that perhaps we should be taking the opposite approach. Perhaps we should be finding men and events to praise. Perhaps we should collect stories about conferences and events and men who are doing what we wish ALL conferences and events and men would do.

IMG_3706.jpg

John Allsopp and Maxine Sherrin from Web Directions set the tone as a good example.

Jeffrey Zeldman and Eric Meyer - An Event Apart: Seattle 2010

So do Eric Meyer and Jeffrey Zeldman from An Event Apart and Hugh Forrest from SXSW. There are others I don’t know yet, but there are good stories to be told.

Hugh speaks

I’m not going to conferences these days – no money and no reason to go other than interest. Nobody is paying me for being interested, so I can’t go. That means I can’t be the one bringing home the stories about the conferences, events and men who deserve big praise and recognition.  If I could find a group of women who are actively attending tech conferences and events who would be willing to bring such tales home and tell them, I would serve as organizer and moderator for a blog or site where their stories could be told. 

It doesn’t have to be a huge story. A well-received panel presentation with women panelists. A guy in a bar who sticks up for a woman when some famous tech dude asks her who she slept with to get her job. A set of slides that don’t contain images of tits and asses along with the technical data. An event with a female keynoter. A famous tech dude who helps a woman as a mentor rather than a sexual predator. Keep it simple. Keep the emphasis on who is doing it right and how they are doing it right.

I could use some help in figuring out the best way to set it up, and in designing it to be beautiful. (You don’t have to be a woman to help with that part.) Once it was running I would do all the moderating and upkeep.

If there are enough women who are willing to write about the praiseworthy events and men they discover in their conference travels, we can make this work. As any parent knows, praise teaches better than blame, so let’s stop blaming and start praising. Let’s see if that can create change.

Women, I need to know if you are willing to contribute to this with stories about the good stuff or with technical and design help getting it going. You can leave a comment or you can contact me privately at virginia at vdebolt dot com.

SEE ALSO: Women in Tech: Can You Help Find a Few Good Men, Part II.

 

Useful Links: News Wrap Up

Last week Microsoft announced a new tablet called Surface. Nobody got excited. In fact, some people made it into a joke. But, to Microsoft’s credit, nobody got mad either. The announcement didn’t offend anyone of any gender. Dell should be so clever.

The EU decided to launch a site and video to attract girls into STEM fields. Everybody got excited. Okay – everybody got incensed. Especially female scientists, who raised so much stink that the video was pulled. More stink here.

And finally, in the news, the Michigan Representative who got silenced for using the terrifying word VAGINA in the Michigan House decided to perform “The Vagina Monologues” at the state Capitol with the help of author Eve Ensler. Rep. Lisa Brown for the win.

Oh, and . . . vagina.

 

Useful Links: Paged Media, Gaming culture, ARIA roles

A List Apart has a terrific post on the CSS3 paged media module by Nellie McKesson called Building Books with CSS3.

I know I harp on the topic of women in tech here all the time, but are you aware of the culture of gaming and the way women are treated in that world? Check these two articles: The All Too Familiar Harassment of Feminist Frequency and What the Gaming Community Can Do About It and The Thickest Skin: Backlash to the Feminist Frequency Kickstarter.

HTML5 Accessibility Chops: When to Use an ARIA Role. Sometimes adding an ARIA role does nothing.

Dear Subscribers

Dear Subscribers to this blog,

Thank you for being interested in what Web Teacher has to offer. I really appreciate it.

Are you reading Web Teacher posts in a feed reader of some sort? Perhaps Google Reader. That’s what I use to subscribe to the many, many blogs I read daily.

The benefit of a feed reader is that it’s a simple thing to get all your blog posts in one place each day. The drawback – at least for people like me who allow the full post to be read in the reader – is that folks don’t click through to actually visit the blog very often. Anything not in a post – for example, items in the sidebar – don’t get seen. Since I’m not eliminating everything but the posts from this blog like Jeffrey Zeldman, I’d like to remind you of some of the goodies available in the sidebar.

First, there’s a link to HTML5 News. I know you are interested in keeping up with that topic. I spend time each day making sure you have the latest information about HTML5 in that news report. You can keep track of it by visiting this blog, or by subscribing to the HTML5 News.

The sidebar also shows the latest tweets from the Twitter list The Women in Web Education Daily. The tweeters on this list can help you stay up to date on each days hottest web education and tech news.

The last thing I want to remind you about that sits in the sidebar is a link and slideshow to the group on Flickr called Women in Tech. Readers of this blog attend many tech events each year, and take many photos at those events. I hope you will remember that this Flickr group pool of photos of women in tech exists, and that you add your photos to the group pool.

Drop by once in a while. See what’s going on in the sidebar.

Thank you so much for reading this blog,

Virginia