But when this particular McDonald's Big Mac was found at Colchester United's training ground, the team were understandably a bit confused. In a video he explained: 'I sent a burger into space. Space Burger, Irving, Texas. 443 likes 8 talking about this 132 were here. Under new management! Come check us out and make us your new favorite Burger location, Follow us!
So - I am finally reporting on our trip to Idaho in September. I finished my internship on 9/11 and promptly headed home so that Caitlin and I could run to the airport. We arrived in SLC to a perfectly dry and cool evening - at which point we ran to Cafe Rio for a fix. Kernsters was nice enough to house us for the night so we could be fresh and ready for a baby shower on Caitlin's behalf. I will be reporting on the baby shower later. After the shower on Saturday, we drove up to Idaho Falls for Caitlin's cousin's wedding.The happy couple. Tender moments were enjoyed, including an extremely nice moment when Caitlin's grandparents danced to their song. You have know idea how great of a moment this was.
We returned to Pocatello for the next few days. My focus on this trip was eating. Eating to the point of pure happiness. Meal one was focused on making sure I got a new burger experience.
We went to Tasti Treet! This place is no ordinary mom&pop grease shop. It has two very unique items:
Item #1: The Space Burger! This is a burger cooked within a special metal contraption that seals the juiciness and goodness in on all edges. Its kind of like a grilled cheese sandwich with all the burger fixin's inside. It was bodacious.
Item #2: The Boston Shake! While this does not exist in Boston, nor have I heard of it elsewhere, it exists in Pocatello. This is a full shake (in which I mixed Reeses Peanut Butter cups and chocolate) with an entire scoop of ice cream and fudge on top. You are getting multiple consistencies of deliciousness here. Um, I basically loved it.
Guess who else loves it - my peeps Lids and Abs! Lids was pounding down ice cream as fast as she could. That is a child I can love.
Abs is no stranger to dairy herself. Another important element of our trip was crafting stuffs. Halloween is upon us and crafts are an important part of that. So we made pillows and dish towels. Caitlin shows her crafty beaver ways.
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I was the principal designer on our team. I think it shows in the completely dope witch hat.
Carley, Caitlin, Judes and (sort of) myself worked like mad.
These are obviously not the finished product - but you get the gist.
That night we partied hard with a picnic in the backyard. Aren't sisters precious?
We attempted to make space burgers of our own. Lynn and I investigate the complexity that is space burgering. We chose to put steak, blue cheese, pineapples, chicken, BBQ sauce, hot sauce, etc in ours. I would say that we rule.
Then the crew surprised me for my upcoming birthday with molten lava cakes!!! I love those things. I need Lynn's recipe. Oh, and Caitlin is so cute pregnant - wouldn't you agree?
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Heineman on her YouTube channel in 2019 | |
Born | 1963/1964 (age 56–57)[1] |
---|---|
Other names | Burger |
Occupation | Video game designer, programmer |
Employer | Olde Sküül |
Known for | The Bard's Tale III: Thief of Fate, Dragon Wars |
Spouse(s) | Jennell Jaquays |
Children | 5 |
Rebecca Ann Heineman is an American video game designer and programmer. A long-time veteran of the video game industry, Heineman was a founding member of video game companies Interplay Productions, Logicware, Contraband Entertainment, and Olde Sküül. She has been chief executive officer for Olde Sküül since 2013.
Early life[edit]
Rebecca Ann Heineman (born William Salvador Heineman) was born and raised in Whittier, California.[2] When she was young, she could not afford to purchase games for her Atari 2600, so she taught herself how to copy cartridges and built herself a sizable pirated video game collection. Eventually, she became discontented with just copying games and reverse-engineered the console's code to understand how the games were made.[3] In 1980, Heineman and a friend traveled to Los Angeles to compete in a regional branch of a national Space Invaders championship. Although she did not expect to fall under the top 100 contestants, she won the competition. Later that year, she also won the championship in New York. Heineman is hence considered to be the first national video game tournament champion.[3]
Career[edit]
After she won the tournament, Heineman was offered a writing job for monthly magazine Electronic Games and a consultancy job for a book called How to Master Video Games. During this time, she mentioned to one magazine publisher that she had reverse-engineered Atari 2600 code, and the publisher arranged a meeting between Heineman and the owners of game publisher Avalon Hill. As she met with them, she was hired as a programmer instantaneously. Heineman, aged 16 at the time, moved across the U.S. for her new job, canceling her plans to acquire a high school diploma. At Avalon Hill, Heineman created a manual for the company's programming team, the studio's game engine, and the base code for several software projects, including her first own game, London Blitz, before leaving the company.[3]
Heineman returned to California to work for another developer, Boone Corporation. For Boone, she programmed the games Chuck Norris Superkicks and Robin Hood, acquiring knowledge of programming for Commodore 64, Apple II, VIC-20 and IBM PCs, of video game hardware, as well as video game design. Boone ceased operations in 1983, so Heineman got together with Brian Fargo, Jay Patel and Troy Worrell, and the four founded Interplay Productions (later known as Interplay Entertainment). Heineman acted as lead programmer for the company, working on Wasteland, The Bard's Tale, Out of This World, and the Mac OS and 3DO ports of Wolfenstein 3D.[3]
Heineman went on to design The Bard's Tale III: Thief of Fate, Dragon Wars, Tass Times in Tonetown, Borrowed Time, Mindshadow and The Tracer Sanction, among others, for Interplay. As the company grew to more than 500 employees, Heineman, wishing to return to her small-team roots, left the company in 1995 and co-founded Logicware, where she acted as chief technology officer and lead programmer. Aside from original games, Heineman oversaw the company's porting activities, which included Out of This World, Shattered Steel, Jazz Jackrabbit 2 and a canceled Mac OS port of Half-Life.[3]
In 1999, Heineman founded Contraband Entertainment, operating as its chief executive officer. The company developed several original games alongside ports to various platforms for other developers. Projects led by Heineman include Myth III: The Wolf Age and Activision Anthology, and Mac OS ports for Aliens vs. predator, Baldur's Gate II and Heroes of Might and Magic IV. During this time, she also provided consultancy work directly for other companies: She acted as 'Senior Engineer III' for Electronic Arts, upgraded engine code for Barking Lizards Technologies and Ubisoft, optimized code for Sensory Sweep Studios, acted as senior software architect for Bloomberg L.P. and Amazon, provided training on Xbox 360 development for Microsoft's development studios, and worked on the kernel code for the PlayStation Portable and PlayStation 4 at Sony. During her tenure at Amazon, Heineman was, in addition to her technological role, also the 'Transgender Chair' of Amazon's LGBTQ+ group, known as Glamazon.[3]
Contraband was wound down in 2013, and Heineman founded a new company, Olde Sküül, together with Jennell Jaquays, Maurine Starkey, and Susan Manley. At Olde Sküül, Heineman acts as CEO.[3]
Personal life[edit]
Around 2003, Heineman was diagnosed with gender dysphoria and began transitioning to a woman.[1][4] She formally changed her given name to Rebecca Ann.[1][5] Since the transition, Heineman has been living as a lesbian.[1] She has five children and is married to Jennell Jaquays.[1][6] Heineman resides in El Cerrito, California, where her company Olde Sküül is located.[3][7]
Board service[edit]
Heineman has been part of the advisory board of the Video Game History Museum since 2011, and is part of the board of directors of LGBTQ+ organization GLAAD.[3]
Accolades[edit]
Heineman is recognized as the first national video game tournament champion for winning the 1980 National Space Invaders Championship.[3]Sailor Ranko, a Sailor Moon-based fanfiction comic by Heineman based on an earlier work by written by Duncan Zillman, has won multiple awards.[8][3] In 2017, she became an inductee for the International Video Game Hall of Fame.[3]
Games[edit]
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- The Bard's Tale (1985)
- Borrowed Time (1985)
- Racing Destruction Set (1986, Atari 8-bit family port)
- Tass Times in Tonetown (1986)
- The Bard's Tale III: Thief of Fate (1988)
- Neuromancer (1988)
- Crystal Quest (1989, Apple IIgs port)
- Dragon Wars (1989)
- Track Meet (1991)
- RPM Racing (1991)
- Another World (1992, SNES port)
- Rescue Rover (1993, Apple IIgs port)
- Interplay's 10 Year Anthology: Classic Collection (1993)
- Ultima I: The First Age of Darkness (1994, Apple IIgs port)
- Wolfenstein 3D (1995, Mac/3DO ports)
- Kingdom: The Far Reaches (1995)
- Killing Time (1996)
- Doom (1996, 3DO port)
- Defiance (1997)
- Tempest 2000 (1998, Mac port)
- Remington Top Shot: Interactive Target Shooting (1998)
- Redneck Rampage (1999, Mac port)
- Jazz Jackrabbit 2 (1999, Mac port)
- Galactic Patrol (1999, Mac port)
- Bugdom (1999)
- Myth III: The Wolf Age (2001)
- Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn (2001, Mac port)
- Nanosaur Extreme (2002)
- Icewind Dale (2002, Mac port)
- Hexen II (2002, Mac port)
- Activision Anthology (2002)
- Medal of Honor: Rising Sun (2003)
- Pitfall: The Lost Expedition (2004)
- Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault (2004)
- GoldenEye: Rogue Agent (2004)
- Medal of Honor: European Assault (2005)
- Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars (2007)
- Alvin and the Chipmunks (2007)
- Chip's Challenge (2015, Windows re-release)
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ abcdeBarton, Matt (December 27, 2010). 'The Burger Speaks: An Interview With An Archmage, Page 1 of 7'. Gamasutra. Archived from the original on February 4, 2019. Retrieved February 3, 2019.
- ^'Rebecca_Heineman'. Olde Sküül. Archived from the original on February 3, 2021. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
- ^ abcdefghijklMarie, Meagan (December 4, 2018). Women in Gaming: 100 Professionals of Play. Dorling Kindersley. pp. 32–33. ISBN9780241395066.
- ^Heineman, Rebecca (March 29, 2005). 'A new day in a new life'. LiveJournal. Archived from the original on August 18, 2019. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
- ^Barton, Matt (February 22, 2008). Dungeons and Desktops: The History of Computer Role-Playing Games. CRC Press. p. 197. ISBN9781439865248.
- ^Ennis, Dawn (April 1, 2015). 'This Year's Transgender and Gender-Nonconforming Who's Who'. Advocate. Archived from the original on November 16, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
- ^'This is Burger Becky?'. Burger Becky. Archived from the original on February 16, 2019. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
- ^Rebecca, Heineman. 'The people who bring you Sailor Ranko'. Sailor Ranko. Archived from the original on November 21, 2020. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
External links[edit]
- Stilphen, Scott. '... Rebecca Heineman'. DP Interviews. Team DP. Retrieved March 22, 2019.