A software entrepreneur wants to empower players to develop their own games
Maria Burns Oritz develops software for Indigenous communities - now she she wants to democratize game development
Long before trumpeting the need to pair profit with progressive philosophies became a cornerstone of corporate America, Maria Burns Oritz believed in building the type of businesses that will do well and do good. Even before its official inception in 2015, her Minneapolis-based gaming company 7 Generation Games was a side hustle focused on developing software and gaming platforms that served the needs of underrepresented populations.
We want to help close the education gap," says 41-year-old Burns Oritz, who co-founded the company with her mother, tech veteran and judo champion AnnMaria Waddell (Burns Ortiz's sister is wrestler, Olympian and video game aficionado Ronda Rousey). Many of the games from 7 Generation are made for members of Native American tribes that live within the company's surrounding communities across the midwest. We focus on more diverse voices and content both because they are absent from so many curricula and because no one else on the market was doing this," says Burns Ortiz.
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