An Al Lowe Bio
While I didn't write this, it's the best bio of me
I've seen.
It dates from the summer of 1998, when
Larry's Casino was released. Since then, I've
retired completely from game designing to become a
fulltime website maintainer (i.e., this site) and eJoke
provider to the masses (i.e., CyberJoke
3000).
Updated here.
As a kid, Al Lowe was the perennial
class clown, often getting into trouble with pranks
that didnt amuse his teachers. Ironically, he
later became a high school music teacher, working in
that field for 15 years. Today, as computer gamings
most successful humorists, hes come full circle.
Quips Lowe, "Now I get paid to do all the same
stuff that used to get me in trouble!"
Lowe joined Sierra in 1982, and since
that time has brought to life a wacky, award-winning
cast of characters. His first 3-D animated graphic
adventure game was a spin-off from the 1985 Disney
film, The Black Cauldron. Other early products
included Donald Ducks Playground and Winnie
the Pooh in the 100-Acre Woods, all of which were
produced after Sierra acquired the rights to several
Disney characters in the early 1980s.
During his early years at Sierra, Lowe
oversaw multiple elements of game development, from
design to music to graphics. In 1986, he was lead programmer
on both Roberta Williams Kings Quest
III and the original Police Quest. Over
the years, Lowes special brand of magic has touched
over two dozen Sierra titles in one way or another.
But Lowe is best known as creator of
the popular Leisure Suit Larry series, which spawned
a new computer gaming genre of "adult" titles.
It also spawned a lot of controversy. In fact, the
California legislature once introduced a "Leisure
Suit Larry" bill, to prohibit adult themes in
any computer game. Fortunately, the legislation died
in committee, thanks to the diligence of the software
industry.
With its outrageous humor and fantastic
graphics, Leisure Suit Larry In the Land of the
Lounge Lizards won the coveted Software Publishers
Award for best adventure game of 1987. Since then Lowe
has created five additional adventures for Larry, and
has been featured in such widespread media as Entertainment
Tonight, Rolling Stone, The New York
Times, and Playboy.
In 1992, Lowe created another hit character
in Freddy Pharkas, Frontier Pharmacist. Set
in post-Gold Rush California, you play Freddy, a beloved
but meek pharmacist who must resume his gunslinging
ways in order to save his newly-adopted home town.
Not content with just creating characters,
for 1995s Torins Passage Lowe invented
a whole world. And not just one world, but five
worlds nested together, one inside the other. In Torins
Passage, Lowe tackled the challenge of creating
a game that would be fun for a parent to play with
a child. With its delightful humor, imaginative plot,
gorgeous backgrounds and sophisticated animation, Torins
Passage works well on many levels.
Leisure Suit Larry 7: Love for Sail!
was released in 1996 and has sold over 300,000
copies. It finds the Polyester Prince on a cruise ship
skippered by Captain Thygh, an oversexed fun-loving
female, who sponsors a weekly contest for her male
guests. She calls it "The Thygh's Man Trophy."
Larry wants to win just as soon as he learns the prize:
the winner gets to spend the following week "cruising
on the Captain!"
In 1998, Lowe released Leisure Suit
Larry Casino, the first casino simulator with a
sense of humor. It contains literally thousands of
lines of typical Larry humor for single play. But it's
real strength comes when you connect to the Internet
and play and chat with other real people.
Lowe and his family moved to the Seattle area in 1994.
An accomplished jazz artist, he continues to play various
saxophones in various Seattle jazz bands.
Postscript
Since I left Sierra On-Line in 1998,
I have truly enjoyed retirement, learning to
play golf, corresponding with the many fans who have
found me via this web site, playing jazz, traveling,
spending time with family and friends, catching
up on my reading and film watching, working on my N-scale model railroad NTRAK modules, and doing volunteer work for local charities.
I'd love to hear from you and add
you to my fan letters page...if I somehow made you
laugh, but especially if my games were important
to you in some way, or influenced your career or life--especially if you wound up in jail!
Click on the Send Email link
under "More" on the menu bar above.
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