Computer programmer Cassius John-Adams explains how he mashed up Crazy Taxi and The Fifth Element during an obsessive three-year period, single-handedly creating the game he’d always dreamed of

Over lunch one day at work, Cassius John-Adams, a computer programmer for a Canadian TV network, was moaning to his co-workers that things aren’t as good as they used to be. “We got on to how everything, from video games to science-fiction films, was better in the late 90s and early 00s when we were all much younger,” explains the 45-year-old from his house in Toronto. Someone mentioned The Fifth Element, Luc Besson’s wildly inventive 1997 sci-fi film. John-Adams brought up Crazy Taxi, Sega’s cartoonishly energetic driving game. And then, “I was like: ‘Man, I wish there was a mix between the two.’ Everyone around the table went, ‘Yeah, that would be the perfect mix.’”

It was the spark for one of the great passion projects in recent video-gaming history. Doing nearly all of the work himself, fitting it around his day job, John-Adams has made that very hybrid, a new game called Mile High Taxi that splices the vibe of Besson’s movie and the hurtling mayhem of Crazy Taxi into a heady compound of millennial nostalgia.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

THG needs to reassure shareholders and get a proper chairman | Nils Pratley

After disastrous City presentation it’s time for senior independent director Zillah Byng-Thorne…

‘Tragedy upon tragedy’: why 39 US mass shootings already this year is just the start

With 1,214 gun deaths so far in January, the ready availability of…

If Putin has eliminated Prigozhin, the result could be more – not less – instability for Russia | Samantha de Bendern

The Russian president has seemingly upped the stakes: anyone who challenges his…

Sewage island: how Britain spews its waste into the sea

Untreated waste regularly flows into waters across England and Wales. Is it…