David Mullich (; born ) is an American game producer and game designer. He created the 1980 adventure game The Prisoner, produced the 1995 adaptation I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream, and developed Heroes of Might and Magic III and Heroes of Might and Magic IV.
Mullich designed most of Edu-Ware's adventure games and role-playing video games, and programmed the company's EWS3 graphics engine and many of its educational programs. Edu-Ware's Space game series were accused of violating the copyrights of Game Designers' Workshop's tabletop game Traveller. Mullich redesigned the games and started a new series called . was an early simulation video game. He eventually left Edu-Ware for Electric Transit.
In 1987, Mullich joined Walt Disney Computer Software, where he produced video games based upon Disney characters, films, and television shows with external developers and licensees. He left due to internal politics from upper management. In 1991, he joined developer Interactive Support Group to create driving and for fifth-generation console systems CD-i and 3DO. Mullich next became development director at game publisher Cyberdreams, where he became involved with I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream as soon as he heard about its development.
While participating in a game design panel at the Computer Game Developer's Conference, Mullich met Jon Van Caneghem, founder of game developer New World Computing. Van Caneghem hired Mullich in 1997 to lead the Heroes of Might and Magic III development team. Mullich led the team through Heroes of Might and Magic IV. The hero Sir Mullich in is named after him. With the financial demise of parent company The 3DO Company, Mullich left New World for software publisher Activision, where he worked on , a role-playing game based upon the Source engine. When his contract with Activision concluded, Mullich was hired by fellow Cyberdreams alumni Jamie Ottilie to be the development director of his mobile game publishing start-up, Abandon Mobile.
During the filming of Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, Mullich was a well-known member of the J.R.R. Tolkien on-line fan community, being a news reporter and film messageboard moderator for the website Tolkien Online and, under the pseudonym Ancalagon The Black, publisher of "The Complete List of Film Changes", documenting the differences between the films and the books.
Personal life
Games
Published by Edu-Ware Services
Published by Electric Transit
Published by Walt Disney Computer Software
Published by Philips Interactive Media of America
Published by Cyberdreams
Published by The 3DO Company
Published by Activision
Published by Abandon Mobile
Published by Spin Master Studios
External links
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