Stormfront Studios
Stormfront Studios, Inc. was an American video game developer based in San Rafael, California. The studio was led by the pioneering developer Don Daglow. They were known for their work with RPGs in the late 1980s and early 1990s, including the first MMORPG with a graphical interface, Neverwinter Nights. For the remainder of the 1990s they were primarily a sports studio, and launched games in many long running franchises including Tiger Woods PGA Tour. Switching to licensed titles in the early 2000s the studio had success with the critically acclaimed The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, but otherwise the group struggled financially with film adaptations and shut down in 2008.
The company received major awards and award nominations in its time, from The Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences, G4 Television, BAFTA, The IGDA Game Developers Choice Awards, The EMMA Awards, SCEA, and the Software Publishers Association. In 2008, Neverwinter Nights was honored at the 59th Annual Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards for advancing the art form of MMORPG games. In its final configuration in 2007, the company had over 50 developers working on two teams, and owned its proprietary engines, tools, and technology. The studio sold fourteen million copies of its games over its lifetime.
History
Origins and RPG focus (1988-1993)
Stormfront was founded in 1988 as Beyond Software by Don Daglow, who had worked as a game programmer and then as Director of Game Development at Mattel Intellivision, as a producer at Electronic Arts, and as a production executive at Broderbund. Stormfront's management includes veterans of Disney, Electronic Arts, Ensemble Studios, LucasArts, Origin Systems, THX, Vivendi Universal and Warner Bros. The name would be changed in 1993 as the trademark for Beyond proved difficult to enforce.Daglow had previously worked on game projects with Kathi McHugh and Steve Case of AOL. Stormfront's initial projects were a series of online titles for AOL, including the first fully automated play-by-email game, Quantum Space. This led to the studio adopting the Dungeons & Dragons license to develop Neverwinter Nights in 1991. The title was the first graphical MMORPG and remained active until 1997. Neverwinter Nights held the all-time record as the top revenue-producing online RPG for almost ten years until the success of Ultima Online in the late 1990s. The studio also developed a number of single player Gold Box D&D titles, starting with Gateway to the Savage Frontier. The D&D license was also used to develop the first RTS game to use a 3D perspective, Stronghold.