Ken Levine

Game designer

Popular As Ken Levine (game developer)

Birthday September 1, 1966

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Flushing, New York, U.S.

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

#26237 Most Popular

1912

Since the release of BioShock, Levine served as creative director and lead writer on BioShock Infinite, set in 1912 in the floating city of Columbia.

BioShock Infinite was a critical and commercial success, winning over 80 awards pre-release.

1966

Kenneth M. Levine (born September 1, 1966) is an American game developer.

He is the creative director and co-founder of Ghost Story Games (formerly known as Irrational Games).

He led the creation of the BioShock series, and is also known for his work on Thief: The Dark Project and System Shock 2.

1988

He studied drama at Vassar College, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in drama in 1988, in Poughkeepsie, New York before moving to Los Angeles to pursue a film career, writing two screenplays.

Before he got into gaming, Levine used to work as a computer consultant on Wall Street but admitted he was not very good at it, describing his attitude towards the job as a "slacker."

1994

System Shock 2 is the sequel to Looking Glass' System Shock (1994).

1995

In 1995, he was hired as a game designer by Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Looking Glass Studios after replying to a job ad in Next Generation magazine.

At Looking Glass, Levine worked with pioneering designer Doug Church to establish the initial fiction and design of Thief: The Dark Project.

1997

In 1997, following his work on Thief, Levine left Looking Glass along with two coworkers, Jonathan Chey and Robert Fermier, to found Irrational Games.

The studio's first game was System Shock 2, an early hybrid of a role-playing game and first-person shooter.

1999

Levine served as lead writer and designer, and the game shipped in 1999 to critical acclaim.

Irrational Games developed Freedom Force and its sequel Freedom Force vs The 3rd Reich, real-time tactical role-playing games that drew heavily on the love Levine and Irrational Games's artist Robb Waters had for the Silver Age of Comic Books.

After the first Freedom Force game, Irrational developed Tribes: Vengeance and SWAT 4, on which Levine served as writer and executive producer respectively.

2004

Although Tribes: Vengeance, SWAT 4, and Third Reich all shipped within a year of one another in 2004 and 2005, Irrational Games had been working in preproduction on the first-person shooter BioShock, the studio's most ambitious game at that point, since 2002.

2005

In 2005, Levine, Chey, and Fermier sold Irrational Games to publisher Take-Two Interactive.

Take-Two Interactive changed their name to 2K, just as BioShock was released.

BioShock was a critical and commercial success, and is considered one of the best games of all time.

The BioShock franchise has sold over 25 million units to date.

2007

Levine was named one of the "Storytellers of the Decade" by Game Informer and was the 1UP Network's 2007 person of the year.

The game went through numerous revisions to its premise and gameplay, and was released in August 2007.

2008

In 2008, Levine delivered the keynote address at the Penny Arcade Expo in Seattle, discussing his youth as a nerd in the 1970s and how it impacted the path of his career.

2009

In 2009, he was chosen by IGN as one of the top 100 game creators of all time.

He received the inaugural Golden Joystick "Lifetime Achievement Award" for his work.

Levine was born in Flushing, New York to a Jewish family.

2013

In June 2013, Levine had been confirmed to be writing the script for a new film version of the dystopian science fiction novel Logan's Run.

However, he was later dropped from the project.

2014

On February 18, 2014, Levine announced that Irrational Games would be closing down, with fifteen members of the staff to follow Levine to focus on digital only, narrative-driven games for Take-Two.

2016

Levine stated in a 2016 interview that the stress of managing Infinite's development had affected his health and personal relationships, and rather than stay on to lead an even larger BioShock game, opted to depart from it.

Levine's current project involves a concept of "Narrative Legos" that can be used to create an endlessly-replayable story-driven video game.

In April 2016, Levine stated he was working with Interlude to write and produce the pilot episode for an interactive, live-action series based on The Twilight Zone, which will be published by CBS.

2017

On February 23, 2017, Irrational Games was rebranded as Ghost Story Games, founded by 12 of the former Irrational members with Levine remaining as president and creative director.

In January 2022, the studio's game was reported to be in development hell, with employees blaming Levine for a lack of leadership in producing a vaguely pitched game that Levine described as a "narrative LEGO" in which every player would have a unique experience.

On December 8, 2022, they revealed their game, Judas.

Ken Levine has been a consultant and co-author of three books related to the BioShock franchise.

These are BioShock: Rapture, BioShock Infinite: Mind In Revolt and The Art of BioShock Infinite.

Levine himself did not work on the majority of Rapture and Mind in Revolt, but provided the intellectual property and quotes used by the authors in the books.

The author for Rapture was John Shirley and the author for Mind in Revolt was Joe Fielder.

Levine personally wrote an introduction in the Deluxe Edition of The Art of BioShock Infinite, published by Dark Horse Comics.