Nicholas Fortugno
Nicholas Fortugno (born May 13, 1975) is an American game designer and educator. Fortugno is perhaps best known for designing Diner Dash, a top-selling CASUAL game developed by Gamelab, and the award-winning Ayiti: The Cost of Life. In addition to his large body of digital work, Fortugno has been involved in the design of numerous non-digital projects, including board games, collectable trading card games, large-scale social games, and live-action role-playing (LARP).
Since 2002, Fortugno has taught the Game Design and Interactive Narrative program at Parsons The New School for Design, and has contributed to the development of the school’s game design curriculum. Fortugno is CCO of Rebel Monkey, a New York City-based game development studio focusing on casual games and cofounded with Margaret Wallace.
Early Biography and Education
Born in the Bronx, New York, Fortugno was raised primarily in Yonkers, New York, where he attended Gorton High School. Fortugno earned B.A.’s in English and Philosophy from the State University of New York College at Purchase in 1997. Between 2000 and 2002, he attended the City University of New York Hunter College as a doctoral student in English Literature, with a concentration on post-war American novels.
Career
Gamelab
Fortugno worked at Gamelab starting in 2000, ultimately becoming Director of Game Design before leaving in 2006. Fortugno acted as lead designer and co-designer for many digital Gamelab projects, including:
- Arcadia - Game Design, Process
- Arcadia Remix – Designer
- Ayiti: The Cost of Life - Lead Designer
- Diner Dash - Lead Designer, Writer
- Downbeat - Game Design
- Drome Racing Challenge - Writer, Designer
- Fate: The Carnivale Game - Level Designer, Writer
- Inventor Saves the Day! - Lead Designer, Writer
- Junkbot - Game Design
- Junkbot Undercover - Game Design
- LEGO Fever - Designer
- Miss Management - Game Design
- Motorbike Blast - Game Design
- Plantasia - Lead Designer
- Spybotics - Writer
- Stack-It! - Lead Designer
Diner Dash Diner Dash is an action strategy game in which the player takes the role of Flo, a stockbroker who quits her job to run her own diner. One of the top-selling downloadable games of 2004, Diner Dash was later ported to mobile phone, given a retail release and made available via 100% advert-supported download. Versions have been created for the PlayStation Portable, Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS platforms. GamingTalkHQ reported that a version for Xbox Live Arcade for the Xbox 360 was imminent.
Rebel Monkey
Cofounded in 2007 by Fortugno and Margaret Wallace, Rebel Monkey is a New York City-based casual game development studio. Rebel Monkey received $1 million in first-round funding from Redpoint Ventures in February 2008. In July 2008, Rebel Monkey released “Habitat Rescue”, a downloadable strategy game designed by Fortugno in which the player directs a group of lions in restoring their polluted savanna habitat. “Habitat Rescue” is currently distributed by National Geographic and RealArcade. In early 2009, Rebel Monkey announced the launch of casual MMO CampFu.
CampFu CampFu is an online virtual world with a summer camp theme. Emphasizing collaborative team play and aimed at the teenaged demographic, CampFu officially launched on March 17, 2009 after a beta stage that began in February of the same year. CampFu is free to play, but users can access premium content by purchasing in-world currency called FuCash and/or a VIP membership subscription. Users can also earn Tickets, which can be exchanged for clothing items, by playing CampFu games. Games currently playable include:
- Veg-Out
- WordMob
- Fungeez
- Critter Smackdown
CampFu is built on Rebel Monkey Inc.'s Monkey Wrench development platform, which the company will make available to third-party developers in the second quarter of 2009.
Social and Non-Digital Games
In 2003, Fortugno teamed with Katie Salen and Frank Lantz to design the Big Urban Game (BUG) for the University of Minnesota’ Design Celebration. The BUG consisted of a race between three teams, each of which attempted to move a 25-foot high inflatable game piece past a series of checkpoints set through the Twin Cities.
Fortugno, Salen, and Lantz later collaborated again to make Slow Games, a two-page spread of games for Metropolis Magazine’s 25th Anniversary issue in April 2006.
Later that year, Fortugno was one of five founders (including Greg Trefry, Catherine Herdlick, Mattia Romeo, and Peter Seung-Tek Lee) of Come Out & Play (CO&P), the world’s first street game festival. The first CO&P ran in New York City from September 22nd to 24th. With Trefry and Romeo, Fortugno designed the street game Insider; Fortugno also ran his original existential horror LARP entitled Ghost Engines in the Sky. The following year, Amsterdam hosted the CO&P as part of the PICNIC festival in 2007. CO&P returned to NYC June 6th to 8th 2008.
Fortugno has designed several non-digital games for the Game Developers Conference, including: Alphabet City, Confquest, Leviathan, Pantheon, and Supercollider. He was also involved in the design process of the Mighty Beanz collectable card game and the X-Pod Face-Off board game.
Live-Action Role-Playing Games
While attending SUNY Purchase in the mid-90’s, Fortugno began his Seasons of Darkness LARP, which ran for several years and was reported on in Rules of Play by Salen and Eric Zimmerman and Daniel Mackay’s The Fantasy Roleplaying Game.
In addition to Seasons of Darkness and CO&P’s Ghost Engines in the Sky, Fortugno has created a multitude of additional LARP’s, including A Measure for Marriage, a live-action role-playing game modeled after a Shakespearean comedy designed to facilitate a friend’s marriage proposal. Fortugno also created No Meaner Name than Diplomacy, an upstairs/downstairs LARP performed at GenCon.
External links
- Rebel Monkey, Inc.
- CampFu
- Rebel Monkey raises $1M Investment
- More details on Rebel Monkey project as it hires CTO
- IMGDC: Nick Fortugno On The Rise Of The Casual MMO
- New York Times article featuring Fortugno—Video Games Are Their Major, So Don't Call Them Slackers
- A 2006 Gamasutra podcast featuring Fortugno—GDC Radio Presents - Gamasutra Podcast on Gamer Demographics, Part 2
- Learning to Play to Learn, by Fortugno and Eric Zimmerman
- Fortugno's reflections on A Measure for Marriage