Jim Aloye tests his game by the Pagoda

The Quest to Build a Better Game

By Kristen Evans

Jim Aloye ā€™01 plans to use advances in geolocation tech to change the face of role-playing video games ā€” and how businesses in cities like Reading advertise.

 

When gamers pound the pavement to nab burly Bulbasaurs and fiery Charmanders in ā€œPokĆ©mon Go,ā€ they sometimes wander into traffic to catch their creatures. Thatā€™s because Nintendoā€™s revolutionary location-based video game requires players to search for PokĆ©mon in the real world using their phones, something popular console games were never designed to do.

The runaway commercial success of ā€œPokĆ©mon Goā€ inspired Jim Aloye, a longtime gamer and software developer, to put his own spin on the technology. By next year, Reading-area residents can begin their own adventures in Aloyeā€™s ā€œEternal Conquest: The Great War,ā€ a new app that mixes the appeal of old-school quest titles like ā€œZeldaā€ with the geolocation tech that powers ā€œPokĆ©mon Go.ā€

ā€œWhen I was a kid, I always liked Japanese-style role-playing games because my hand-eye coordination wasnā€™t all that great,ā€ Aloye deadpans. But Aloye always felt these games lacked a certain something ā€” either the ending was a letdown or the game wasnā€™t challenging enough. His solution was ā€œEternal Conquest.ā€

ā€œThere came a point where I thought, ā€˜I write software ā€” why not solve that problem?ā€™ā€ says Aloye, who majored in computer information systems and worked in Alverniaā€™s Information Technology (IT) department.

ā€œI was fortunate enough to work with (assistant professor) Polly Mathys as IT infrastructure was growing at Alvernia,ā€ explains Aloye. ā€œI would have never gotten that level of education anywhere else.ā€ His unique experience at Alvernia gave him the confidence to strike out on his own after graduation and eventually to develop a project like ā€œEternal Conquest.ā€

So far, Aloyeā€™s app idea has generated plenty of buzz. Location-based content makes the game more challenging for avid players ā€” but it benefits local businesses, too. ā€œSay youā€™re inside the Santander Arena,ā€ Aloye offers. ā€œIf Santander signs up for a geo-partnership, then exclusive in-game content will become available if youā€™re physically playing in that location.ā€

By sponsoring content, local ā€œgeopartnersā€ can become part of the game and generate interest in their own goods and services. Two geopartners, Inner Healing Chiropractic in Bally, Pa., and Suburban Tavern & Cigar Lounge in Mount Penn have already signed on, bolstering Aloyeā€™s fundraising efforts.

In total, Aloye hopes to crowdfund $100,000 to finish developing the game and attract venture capital that will launch the app to commercial success. So far, he has raised more than $10,000 and is preparing to release a prequel game to market in the coming months, all while working a separate full-time job. 

And his dedication to ā€œEternal Conquestā€ shows. ā€œI mean my wife can tell you,ā€ Aloye says with a laugh. ā€œI come home from work, and Iā€™ll swallow some food, and ā€” immediately ā€” Iā€™m on it.ā€

 

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