Burger Becky’s Out Of This World
February 10th, 2020 2:21 PM by Ken Gagne | Filed under Game trail, Mainstream coverage; Comments Off on Burger Becky’s Out Of This World |
Six years after I backed its Kickstarter, and four years after the final product was due, I received the documentary GIRLS GAME: Women Who Game (originally entitled No Princess in the Castle). The film features interviews with women gamers and game developers about their experiences and passions.
GIRLS GAME features a few names that will be familiar to Apple II users: Jeri Ellsworth and Rebecca Heineman. Jeri has been a KansasFest attendee, a Juiced.GS cover story, and a guest on my Polygamer podcast. Alas, the topic of her Apple II origins and passions did not come up in the documentary.
Fortunately, Burger Becky ensured our favorite retrocomputer was represented. Toward the very end of the film, she holds up two games from her impressive résumé, declaring "They said it couldn’t be done!". The movie offers little context to that statement, but it’s not hard for us to figure it out.
The games in question are Out of This World and The Bard’s Tale III: Thief of Fate. It’s no wonder they said Out of This World couldn’t be done: when Jess Johnson asked Becky what her greatest achievement was, she cited this game.
That’s a tough call, since I’ve done so many projects in my career so far. I think I’d have to say was the evil MOD I had to do to get Out Of This World for the SNES to copy backgrounds quickly. Since Interplay wouldn’t pay for a SuperFX chip, I found a way to do it with static RAM on the cart and DMA which got me a great frame rate. Interplay wouldn’t pay for the static RAM either, so I ended up using Fast ROM and a MVN instruction. Interplay wouldn’t pay for a 3.6 MHz ROM either. So, frustrated, I shoved my block move code into the DMA registers and use it as RAM running at 3.6 MHz. It worked. I got fast block moves on slow cartridges and made a game using polygons working on a 65816 with pure software rendering.
This impressive feat could be worth a documentary of its own. In the meantime, thanks for working it into this film, Becky!