Lee Reilly
Senior Program Manager, GitHub Developer Relations. Open source hype man, AI whisperer, hackathon and game jam wrangler. I write && manage programs, support dev communities, and occasionally ship something weird just for the vibes.
We ran our very first game jam last year and had so much fun, we decided to throw another one! The Challenge You have the entire month of November to…
We ran our very first game jam last year and had so much fun, we decided to throw another one!
You have the entire month of November to create a web-based game loosely based on the theme “change”.
What do we mean by loosely based on “change”? We literally mean, loosely based. Some examples might be a FPS where you throw the loose change in your pockets at the enemy or perhaps a puzzle game where you have to change form to overcome obstacles.
Your game. Your rules. You can participate either as an individual or as a team. You’re encouraged to use open source libraries, frameworks, graphics, and sounds in your game.
We’re giving away shiny new iPad Airs (16GB models) to our 5 lucky winners. Runners-up will receive a $100 credit for the GitHub Shop, where they can grab some of our :octocat: shirts, hoodies, stickers, and more!
All winners and runners-up will be showcased on our blog.
We have a handful of judges who are eager to play your games!
README
file that includes a brief description of your game, what open source projects (if any) you used, and a screenshot.Open source software is critical infrastructure, but it’s underfunded. With a new feasibility study, GitHub’s developer policy team is building a coalition of policymakers and industry to close the maintenance funding gap.
That idea you’ve been sitting on? The domain you bought at 2AM? A silly or serious side project? This summer, we invite you to build it — for the joy, for the vibes, For the Love of Code 🧡
Today, the Git project released new versions to address seven security vulnerabilities that affect all prior versions of Git.