

Characters like Donkey Kong and Pac-Man were far more captivating than the spreadsheets and word processors he was using in school. Then this video game phenomenon hit, and like everybody else, I went to arcades.” “Mortal Kombat hit a very specific time in the industry where a bunch of things happening in the background affected development of this game in particular.” -Jeff PetersĪrcade games enthralled him. I was going to go into corporate law because it intrigued me, for some weird reason I still don’t understand. I was a speech-and-debate guy, and I was looking at law schools. He had no designs on making games professionally. But programming was just a way to scratch an itch. He enrolled in the few programming courses on the curriculum and kept at it after graduation, moving on to PDP-11 minicomputers hooked up to mainframes in college.

“One of my best friends at the time made a computer game and would sell it in Ziploc baggies, with the disk and instruction card, from the back of his truck to computer stores and individuals,” Peters said.įascinated, Peters investigated the Radio Shack TRS-80 personal computer - somewhat affectionately referred to as the “Trash-80” - at his high school.
