David W. Bradley


David W. Bradley is a video game designer and programmer, most notable for the role-playing video games ', ', , Wizards & Warriors, and Dungeon Lords.

Career

Bradley was originally a music studies student when he learned about music composition software. He learned how to program to write his own software on the university mainframe and eventually began writing games. This translated into a job in the computer industry as a game designer and programmer. His early work includes Parthian Kings for Avalon Hill. After Robert Woodhead left the Wizardry video game series, Bradley co-designed ' with Andrew C. Greenberg. The design was based on a game that Bradley had already written several years prior, but it was rebranded and rewritten as a Wizardry sequel. Though recommended by contemporary game reviewers, Matt Barton wrote in Dungeons and Desktops that the game was not a significant departure from the previous titles, which were still using game design based on the 1981 original title. This was followed by ' and , which formed the beginning of a new trilogy and were solely designed by Bradley. Both games were well received by critics, and the latter was praised for its design. During the development of the seventh game, Bradley was named in a lawsuit filed by Woodhead and Greenberg against Sir-Tech over royalties. Bradley said that he was uninvolved in the dispute, and, following a falling-out with Sir-Tech, left the company. He subsequently designed the action game CyberMage for Origin Systems. After founding Heuristic Park in 1995, he designed Wizards & Warriors and Dungeon Lords.

Games