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Don L. Daglow President, CEO, Founder, Stormfront Studios Inc. Don Daglow has served as president and CEO of Stormfront Studios since founding the company in 1988, and has been involved in game development for 34 years. His work has earned recognition in Inc., Upside and The Red Herring, and Electronic Games has called him "one of the best-known and respected producers in the history of the field." Prior to founding Stormfront, Don served as director of Intellivision game development for Mattel, as a producer at Electronic Arts, and as head of the Entertainment and Education division at Broderbund. He designed and programmed the first-ever computer baseball game in 1971 (now recorded in the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown), the first mainframe computer role-playing game (Dungeon, 1975), the first sim game (Intellivision Utopia, 1982, named to Video Game Hall of Fame), and the first game ever to use multiple camera angles (Intellivision World Series Baseball, 1983). Don co-designed Computer Game Hall of Fame title Earl Weaver Baseball (1987), the first massively multiplayer online graphic adventure, Neverwinter Nights for AOL (1991-97) and the first 3D-perspective RTS (Stronghold, 1993). In 2003 Don was elected to the Board of Directors of the Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences. That same year he received the Classic Gaming Expo Achievement Award for "groundbreaking accomplishments that shaped the Video Game Industry." He also is a past winner of the National Endowment for the Humanities New Voices playwriting competition. Don holds a BA in Writing from Pomona College and a Ed.M. from Claremont Graduate University. |
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