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Computer Games Design Graduates Selected for Tranzfuser 2025 Competition

Computer Games Design Graduates Selected for Tranzfuser 2025 Competition

A team of Computer Games Design graduates at USW has once again been selected for Tranzfuser 2025 – the UK's flagship competition for emerging game development talent.
RuneCube Studios – made up of Rhys Jones, Connor Elsbury and Cameron Fritz, along with BA Music Producing graduate Wigg Grant – is one of just 21 teams across the UK to be chosen for this year's programme.
Their game, Overstaffed, is a two-player co-op action adventure set in the world of Arrilla. The wizards the players control are exploring an ancient area known as the Forsaken Ruins, home to different environments each with their own climate and inhabitants, in order to retrieve an extremely powerful artefact. The game features multiple co-op elements such as Overstacking, which allows players to throw each other, reach areas which are usually unreachable, and defeat more difficult enemies.
Now in its 10th year, Tranzfuser gives graduate teams the opportunity to independently develop a vertical slice of their game over the summer, culminating in a public showcase this September. The programme goes far beyond game development: teams are given the freedom to pursue their entrepreneurial ambitions, supported by the Games Biz Academy, a curated resource hub designed to develop real-world business and studio leadership skills.
Over the course of 14 weeks, RuneCube Studios, with support from the BA Computer Games Design course team, will work with a handpicked industry mentor, often a seasoned developer from the UK Games Fund portfolio. Alongside independent development and support from their local hub, the team will take part in cohort-wide activities and mentoring sessions, giving them a unique opportunity to grow not just as developers, but as founders building the foundations of a sustainable studio.
At the end of the programme, all teams will have the chance to pitch for grant funding of up to £25,000 from the UK Games Fund to support the commercial development of their game – a crucial stepping stone towards taking their work to market.
Connor Elsbury, programme lead for RuneCube Studios, said:
'We are delighted to be a part of the Tranzfuser 2025 lineup and are ready to work our hardest to bring the best possible game we can. Tranzfuser is a great opportunity for each team member to develop their skills, and potentially push Overstaffed out to the public and find fans.
'The competition is one of the best opportunities we could have received right after coming out of University. It is a great way for the team to develop their skills both existing and new by working on a game we are all familiar with developing. We also see it as an opportunity to put our names out in the industry, potentially create our own studio and also have it become a hallmark of our experience as developers.'
Dann Rees, course leader for Computer Games Design, added:
'We are very proud that 2025 marks the 10th consecutive year that USW teams have earned a place in Tranzfuser – an incredible achievement that underscores the course's strong track record in producing talented, ambitious, and industry-ready graduates.'
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Sony hikes profit forecast seeing smaller trade war impact

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Sony hikes profit forecast seeing smaller trade war impact

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I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie
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The Guardian

time12 hours ago

  • The Guardian

I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie

Incredibly, given all the trouble in the world, we were short of an item or two on my BBC radio show recently. Someone suggested something about budgie smugglers coming back into fashion. Hardly very Reithian, is it? On the other hand, we all need a break from the dark stuff. And anyway, it turned out there was plenty in the budgie smugglers story with which to inform, educate and entertain our listeners. For a start, we needed to define the term. I'd been banging on about budgie smugglers on the radio all morning when I got a text from my mum demanding I explain what the devil these budgie smugglers were. In fact, she was so unfamiliar with the term that she spelt it phonetically using her Croatian keyboard, which renders it 'bađi smagles'. So, to be clear, we're talking men's swimwear, with bađi smagles being the tight, not-leaving-much-to-the-imagination style, as distinct from rather more modest swimming shorts which, mercifully, have become the norm. 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If it is, as my penance, I'll wear nothing but budgie smugglers, in and out of the water, for the rest of my days. Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

Rory McIlroy's good luck charm that ‘inspired Masters win' is revealed: ‘I wore it down Magnolia Lane every day'
Rory McIlroy's good luck charm that ‘inspired Masters win' is revealed: ‘I wore it down Magnolia Lane every day'

Belfast Telegraph

time2 days ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

Rory McIlroy's good luck charm that ‘inspired Masters win' is revealed: ‘I wore it down Magnolia Lane every day'

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