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Richard Rouse (historian)
Richard Rouse may refer to: *Richard Rouse III, American video game designer * Richard Rouse (Australian colonial settler) (1774–1852), Australian colonial public servant and settler *Richard Rouse (politician) Richard Rouse (2 January 1842 – 2 March 1903) was an Australian politician. He was born at Guntawang near Mudgee to pastoralist Edwin Rouse and Hannah Hipkins. He was educated at Parramatta and subsequently managed his father's 4,000-acr ...
(1842–1903), Australian politician and horse breeder {{human name disambiguation, name=Rouse, Richard ...
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Richard Rouse III
Richard Rouse III is an American video game designer best known as the designer of ''The Suffering (game), The Suffering'' (2004) and the author of ''Game Design: Theory & Practice''. Career Rouse produced two Macintosh games, fantasy RPG ''Odyssey: The Legend of Nemesis'' (1996) and the military first-person shooter ''Damage Incorporated'' (1997). They used the technology of Bungie's Minotaur: The Labyrinths of Crete, Minotaur and Marathon 2: Durandal, Marathon 2. Rouse went on to work at Leaping Lizard Software where he was lead designer on the 1998 3D Video game remake, remake of ''Centipede (1998 video game), Centipede''. From there he moved to Surreal Software where he was lead designer and writer on the action horror game ''The Suffering (video game), The Suffering'' and creative director and writer on its sequel, ''The Suffering: Ties That Bind''. In October 2005 he became the Director of Game Design at Midway Games, Midway. Rouse wrote the book ''Game Design: Theory & ...
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Richard Rouse (Australian Colonial Settler)
Richard Rouse (26 February 177410 May 1852) was an Anglo-Australian public servant who was active during the Colonial development of New South Wales as the Superintendent of Public Works and Convicts at Parramatta under the direction of NSW Governors William Bligh and Lachlan Macquarie. He is attributed as the designer of Rouse Hill House in , that was his family home from 1819 until his death in 1852. Biography Rouse was born in Oxfordshire, England in 1774. He arrived in Sydney in December 1801 as a free settler with his wife, Elizabeth Adams, and their two young children. In March 1802 Governor Philip Gidley King granted Rouse and he established on a farm at on the Hawkesbury River. In July 1805 he was appointed superintendent of lumberyard at Parramatta. In 1806 Rouse welcomed Governor Bligh against the despotism of the New South Wales Corps and was one of the governor's staunchest supporters. After sympathizing with Bligh, he was named by Bligh as one of the witne ...
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