Cryptic Studios

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Cryptic Studios
Industry Computer gaming
Founded 2000
Headquarters Los Gatos, California
Key people John Needham, CEO;
Bruce Rogers, CTO;
Jack Emmert, COO;
Hindol Datta, CFO
Products City of Heroes, City of Villains, Champions Online, Star Trek Online
Employees 100–200 (2007)
Parent independent company (2000–2008)
Atari (2008–present)
[1]
Website http://www.crypticstudios.com

Cryptic Studios, an Atari, Inc. subsidiary,[1][2] is a small American massively multiplayer online role-playing game developer headquartered in Los Gatos, California.

Contents

[edit] History

Established in June 2000, Michael Lewis and Rick Dakan conceived the idea for Cryptic Studios.

"Rick and I wanted to do an online role-playing game," Lewis told the Los Gatos Weekly Times in January 2007. "We'd been role-playing gamers growing up, and thought that online would be a great way to continue that experience, while overcoming the distances involved. We decided that there were too many fantasy games in development—this was 1999, so we discussed many alternatives. Superheroes quickly rose to the top of the list. It is something people could understand and identify with quickly, versus ideas like science fiction or horror, because it provides an infinite background on which to create adventures of all kinds. And who doesn't want to have super powers?"[3]

At a New Year's party in 1999, Lewis and Dakan met Bruce Rogers, Matt Harvey and Cameron Petty, veterans of Atari's Coin Operated Games division who had begun trying to found a computer game company but lacked funding.

In 2000, Lewis sold his company, Stellar Semiconductor, Inc., to Broadcom Corporation. With Lewis' funding and Rogers' expertise, the group formed Cryptic Studios. Role-playing game writer Jack Emmert joined the team to work on game design.

Cryptic Studios logo, 2000–2007

In March 2007, Cryptic Studios moved to a larger corporate headquarters in Los Gatos, California. Plans for the new headquarters include adding a state-of-the-art sound studio to be built by the Walters-Storyk Design Group.[4] At that time the company also adopted a new corporate logo. Cryptic Studios now employs more than 100 full-time employees.

On December 9, 2008, Atari SA announced that it had acquired Cryptic Studios.[1]

On March 2010, Bill Roper was promoted to Chief Creative Officer, succeeding Emmert (who became the Chief Operations Officer), but left the studio in August that same year.[5]

[edit] Products

[edit] City of Heroes/Villains

In early 2002, Cryptic signed a publishing agreement for City of Heroes with NCSoft, which wanted to expand into the United States gaming market.[6]

Cryptic Studios' first MMORPG, City of Heroes, was launched on April 28, 2004. On October 31, 2005, it launched City of Villains, a separate game that was linked with City of Heroes through player-vs.-player combat zones.

As of November 2007, Cryptic Studios had released ten free expansions for City of Heroes and City of Villains.

On November 6, 2007, Cryptic announced that it had sold the City of Heroes/City of Villains intellectual property to NCSoft. All of the City of Heroes/City of Villains development team transitioned to work under NCSoft under the working title NCNorCal (NCNC), which later became the NCSoft-owned subsidiary, Paragon Studios.[7]

[edit] Champions Online

On September 27, 2006, Marvel Entertainment and Cryptic announced that Cryptic Studios was developing Marvel Universe Online, the Marvel universe MMO video game to be published by Microsoft Game Studios for exclusive release to Windows Vista (and Xbox 360, which was later cancelled in March 2010).[8] February 7, 2008, Shane Kim of Microsoft Game Studios reported that MUO was canceled.[9] Cryptic Studios said development would continue using a new IP license of The Champions and became Champions Online.

Cryptic Studios released Champions Online, loosely based on a superhero-based role-playing game, on September 1, 2009. Cryptic Studios had announced this title on February 14, 2008.

[edit] Star Trek Online

On July 27, 2008, Cryptic announced that they had acquired the license to continue development of a Star Trek based MMORPG previously developed by Perpetual Entertainment. Earlier, on March 13, 2008, Star Trek news site TrekMovie.com reported Cryptic Studios as the developer for Star Trek Online based on unnamed sources, confirming a several-weeks-old rumor.[10]

Star Trek Online was officially launched on February 2, 2010. The game resembles an action-oriented MMORPG, with combat and features divided between Space environments and Ground environments during play.

[edit] Other projects

On May 9, 2007, Cryptic Studios released the Cryptic Animation Rig (Cryptic AR), a free download that gives animators the same tools used by Cryptic to create its games.[11]

Cryptic Studios' Web site contains several images of concept art from one or more additional games currently in development.[12] One of these games is Neverwinter, new CORPG game.[13]

[edit] Corporate culture

Cryptic Studios actively recruits outside the gaming industry, and executives say they focus on skill, talent and intelligence rather than experience.[14] Unusual employee benefits include complementary breakfasts twice a week and an on-site game room.[15]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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