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A Salute to Dani Berry, a Transgender Video Gaming Pioneer

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There are plenty of legends in the world of video games whose names will fly off the tongues of casual fans. Nolan Bushnell. Trip Hawkins. Shigeru Miyamoto. Will Wright. Sid Meier.

It’s a shame, then, that so few can name another of the all-time greats, Danielle Bunten Berry.

The designer, born in 1949, is important to video games for any number of reasons, some trivial, some vital to the progression of the entire medium.

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Her first game, 1978’s Wheeler Dealers, was the first ever PC game to be sold in a printed box instead of a sleeve or plastic bag, a necessity born of the game’s inclusion of a custom controller.

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In 1983, Berry’s Ozark Softscape released one of the first games for Electronic Arts, and also one of the greatest cult hits in the history of the PC, MULE. A multiplayer...economic strategy...thing, MULE wasn’t a big seller, but it was very influential amongst developers, and retains a fanbase and community site even to this day.

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In 1984, Berry released the amazing open-world title The Seven Cities of Gold, a game she only made when she wasn’t allowed to make something very similar to what would become Sid Meier’s Civilization. Which wasn’t released until 1990.

In 1988 she designed Modem Wars, the world’s first PC game that could be played across multiple computers in an online environment.

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In 1992, Berry designed Global Conquest, the world’s first PC game from a major publisher that could be played across four computers online.

Then, sadly, things went a little off the rails. In the same year, Berry’s third marriage fell apart, and in November 1992 she did something she’d been contemplating for a while: born a man, she underwent sex reassignment surgery.

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Following the procedure, she would never maintain as high a profile as she had enjoyed while a man, in part because she withdrew from frontline development.

In 1997, while working on a new, improved version of MULE for the internet age, Dani was diagnosed with lung cancer, and passed away a year later at the of 49.

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Her games were rarely successful in term of sales, with only Cities of Gold selling enough to be called a “hit”. Wheeler Dealers sold 50 copies. MULE, as important as it was, only sold 30,000.

But Berry’s legacy hasn’t been determined by sales. It can be measured in her influence on the industry and the developers who followed in her footsteps.

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Nearly every game Berry designed or worked on turned out to be well ahead of its time, especially when it came to the possibilities for bringing multiple people together in the same game. That kind of vision made her a star to other developers.

“That was something kind of visionary of his: that he kind of saw the day when games wouldn’t just be for hardcore gamers,” says Civilization creator Sid Meier, a friend of Berry through thick and thin. “People would play more casual games - people playing together, people playing on networks, people cooperating instead of being competitive. He kind of saw this evolution of gaming that was still pretty far off in the future.”

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In 1998, just before she passed away, she was given the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Computer Game Developers Association. In 2007, she was inducted into the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences.

And perhaps most touching, when completing the blockbuster The Sims, designer Will Wright dedicated the game to Berry.

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Dani Berry is survived by her three children, who now operate a company which trades under the name Ozark Softscape (Berry’s old development studio), and which manages her IP and “digital legacy”.

If you’d like to read more on Berry, this recent Arkansas Times piece gives a great insight into not just her legacy, but her personal life as well.

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