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   » » Wiki: Eddie Dombrower
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Eddie Dombrower
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Eddie Dombrower (born 1957) is an American , , and . He co-created the games Earl Weaver Baseball and Intellivision World Series Baseball. He also designed the first , DOM.

Dombrower studied and at in Claremont, California. After graduating, he considered the possibility that the new technology might provide a method by which could be annotated and recorded for display in animated graphic form. He created the "DOM (for the first three letters of his surname) system" on an computer in 1981/1982. It allowed to use a system of codes to record their work. The resulting dance movements were then displayed by a figure on screen.

In 1982, game design director (also a Pomona College graduate) recruited Dombrower to join to work on a new type of game that, for the first time, would feature large on-screen animated figures and multiple camera angles. Earlier video games all showed a static or scrolling playfield viewed from a single camera angle, and Daglow believed that Dombrower's experience with DOM would help achieve the desired results. Dombrower made progress, and Intellivision World Series Baseball's new design launched a campaign during the Christmas television advertising season in 1982. Although the title had limited distribution due to the video game crash of 1983, it proved that video games could mimic coverage of sports events, and soon other sports games adopted the same style.

In 1986, Daglow, then working at , sought out Dombrower once again. Founder had agreed to back the creation of another baseball game, Earl Weaver Baseball. As they had done at Intellivision, Daglow created the baseball simulation and overall look, while Dombrower designed the game's visual presentation and its underlying . Hall of Fame manager worked with the team to design the game's artificial intelligence by providing contributing his strategic knowledge of When the game appeared in 1987, it was named one of the 25 best games of all time by Computer Gaming World.

Dombrower also led the development of the sequel, Earl Weaver Baseball II.

Dombrower developed for the , the spiritual successor to the series, which was released on March 23, 2009.

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