The Chronicles of Riddick™ Assault on Dark Athena


The developer of The Darkness, Riddick and Syndicate is making a free to play game called Cold Mercury.


Starbreeze is also seeking a distribution deal for its mysterious P13 project, which it is developing with Swedish filmmaker Josef Fares. It pitched the project to various interested parties at GDC this month, GamesIndustry International reports.


Despite Starbreeze's move into the freemium market, it has not left big budget development behind, it said.


"Starbreeze will not leave the AAA segment," boss Mikael Nermark said. "We are discussing with several leading game publisher on publisher financed games, but we will broaden our product portfolio of games in the new business models and segments that have arisen in the games industry.


"I am convinced that Starbreeze will be successful with the new games."


The P13 project is based on a concept developed and pitched by Fares, who has a number of hit Swedish films under his belt. Swedish media company The Story Lab is also on board.


"I love games, and I have been working on a games concept for quite some time," Fares said in September last year. "The more I worked with the concept, the more convinced I felt that this is a solid game idea.


"Together with The Story Lab we created two prototypes that we pitched to the game developer Starbreeze. They liked the idea, and here we are now."


Starbreeze was quick to give the new game the thumbs up. "Directly when Josef presented the idea, we understood that it's a very elaborate concept and that it can be a really great," Nermak said. "We started immediately doing sketches the very same day."


Starbreeze's last game was first-person shooter Syndicate, for EA. The Swedish studio made The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay in 2004, The Darkness in 2007, and The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena in 2009.

The Chronicles of Riddick™ Assault on Dark Athena


Starbreeze, maker of The Chronicles of Riddick and The Darkness - and the developer rumoured to be behind EA's unconfirmed Syndicate revival, has signed a long-term licensing deal to use Gears of War engine Unreal Engine 3.


Swedish developer Starbreeze has entered into a multi-year, studio-wide license agreement to develop projects using Epic Games' engine.


"We evaluated several game engines in the market and came to the conclusion that Unreal Engine 3 is the solution that best fits our needs," CEO Johan Kristiansson said.


"We were particularly impressed by the tool chain, which facilitates rapid iteration and high productivity for our team."


Starbreeze, which is home to around 120 employees, is "currently busy with a major production together with publisher Electronic Arts".


In April last year Starbreeze was spotted trademarking the name Syndicate three times.


EA's name popped-up in one of the filings, suggesting the codenamed "Project RedLime" collaboration was a re-imagining of Syndicate.


Then in August the case for a Syndicate reboot gathered momentum following the emergence of new trademark filings by EA.


EA signed Starbreeze in early 2008 to rework a major franchise for PC, PS3 and Xbox 360.


Syndicate was a series of 90s isometric science fiction games created by Peter Molyneux's old studio Bullfrog Productions. They were proper good, and proper bloody.

...

Search news
Archive
2025
Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
Archives By Year
2025   2024   2023   2022   2021  
2020   2019   2018   2017   2016  
2015   2014   2013   2012   2011  
2010   2009   2008   2007   2006  
2005   2004   2003   2002