Goldsmiths launches games course
The degree is suitable for graduates and professionals from various fields who want to get into the computer games and entertainment industries for the first time or for people who are working in those industries who want to upgrade their skills.
Potential candidates could be someone working writing software systems for a city bank who feels like a career change or a recent graduate in computing science who wants to target their skills for the games and entertainments industries.
The MSc is focused on advanced programming in C++, new technologies (including procedural programming for multi-core hardware and novel artificial intelligence programming for games) and teamwork.
It is directed and taught by experts from the games and entertainment industries and leading researchers. The course can be taken in one or two years to give flexibility to people who are working part-time.
Students will work together in the Games Studio, surrounded by a Research Context of genetic programming, complex geometry, pattern recognition and online meta-data tagging work.
Fixing the shortfall
They will be encouraged to combine innovation with intelligent programming towards producing a final term team project to make a playable computer game demo for PC, a console or mobiles.
William Latham, MSc programme director and former Creative Director of The Thing for PS2, Xbox and PC, said: "Students who do this MSc will gain a firm positioning for a career in the multibillion-pound Games and Entertainment industries, now expanding across Console Games, Massively Multiplayer Games, Casual Games, Serious or Learning Games, Mobile and PC Games, and new emerging areas of social networking games.
"There is a big shortfall in the UK for good games programmers and technical managers/directors and this course will address this serious shortfall.
"During the course there will be opportunities and events for industry networking to hopefully secure jobs for students in the UK or abroad before they finish," he added.
Places are still available for this September. For more information, visit http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/computing/computer-games/.
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Date Published: June 26, 2007
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