Adam Hines

Adam Hines is an American graphic novelist and a writer, designer, and director of video games. He is the creative director of Night School Studio, which he co-founded.

Hines is known for the graphic novel Duncan the Wonder Dog (2010), which won a Xeric Grant, the 2011 Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize,[1] and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Graphic Novel/Comics, and which came in first for the 2010 ComicsAlliance list of the year's best comics.[2] The book was planned to be the first of a nine-book series.[3]

Hines worked at Telltale Games, where he was one of the writers for The Wolf Among Us and Tales from the Borderlands.[4]

In 2014, Hines and cousin Sean Krankel founded video game development company Night School Studio. He was the writer and (with Krankel) the co-designer and co-director of Night School Studio's first game, Oxenfree, which was nominated for multiple awards, including "Best Narrative" at The Game Awards 2016 and "Outstanding Achievement in Story" at the 20th Annual D.I.C.E. Awards.

Hines was also the writer for other Night School Studio games Afterparty and Mr. Robot:1.51exfiltrati0n (co-developed with Telltale Games), and lead writer for Oxenfree II: Lost Signals.[5] Mr. Robot:1.51exfiltrati0n was nominated for the Writers Guild of America Awards for Outstanding Achievement in Videogame Writing in 2017.

  1. ^ "About the Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize | Pennsylvania Center for the Book".
  2. ^ Hudson, Laura (29 December 2010). "ComicsAlliance's Best Comics of 2010: #1 — Duncan the Wonder Dog". Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  3. ^ Apostoli Cappello, Marco (18 September 2014). "Intervista a Adam Hines, l'autore di 'Duncan the Wonder Dog'". fumetto logica. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  4. ^ "The Player: Why 'Oxenfree' may just be the first must-play game of 2016". Los Angeles Times. 2016-01-04. Retrieved 2024-03-13.
  5. ^ "Adam Hines | Writer, Director, Actor". IMDb. Retrieved 2024-03-13.