Psygnosis


Psygnosis Limited was a British video game developer and publisher headquartered at Wavertree Technology Park in Liverpool. Founded in 1984 by Ian Hetherington, Jonathan Ellis, and David Lawson, the company initially became known for well-received games on the Atari ST and Amiga. In 1993, it became a wholly owned subsidiary and first-party developer of Sony Computer Entertainment and began developing games for the original PlayStation. It later became a part of SCE Worldwide Studios. The company was the oldest and second largest development house within the company. The company is best known for creating the Wipeout, Formula One and Colony Wars series.
Reports of Studio Liverpool's closure surfaced on 22 August 2012, with Edge quoting staff tweets. Staff members were told the news by Michael Denny, vice president of Sony Worldwide Studios Europe. Sony said that the Liverpool site would remain in operation, as it was still home to many Sony Departments. At the time of its closure, it employed roughly 100 people comprising two development teams. Mick Hocking oversaw Studio Liverpool's operations as its last Group Studio Director, a position he continued to hold within Evolution Studios.
Psygnosis still exists as a legal entity under Sony and continues to make legal filings, but has had no developers since 2012. In December 2021, Sony renewed Psygnosis' logo and trademarks despite not using the Psygnosis branding since 2000, though this is thought to be standard filing practice as trademarks last for a decade in the United States and Sony had previously filed renewal applications in 2011 as well.

History

Psygnosis was the eventual successor of the defunct 8-bit software house Imagine Software, where Lawson was one of the founders and Hetherington was financial director. Finchspeed, a company created by the directors, attempted to acquire the assets of the failing company but this was unsuccessful and the remains of Imagine, including their much-hyped but never completed "megagames", were sold by the receivers. While the name and trademarks were bought by Ocean Software, Sinclair Research paid a rumoured £100,000 for the rights to Bandersnatch and contracted a new company set up by Hetherington and Lawson, Fire Iron, to produce the game for the Sinclair QL for release in early 1985.
Sinclair withdrew funding from Fire Iron in early 1985, and Psygnosis, which became a limited company under United Kingdom company law in July 1985, revealed their first title Brataccas, which featured many of the concepts originally intended for Bandersnatch, at the 1985 Personal Computer World show in September.
The name of another Imagine Megagame was later used by Psygnosis as an alternative label for some of its releases, such as Ballistix and Captain Fizz Meets The Blaster-Trons.
The box artwork was very distinctive with a black background and fantasy artwork by Roger Dean bordered in red. This style was maintained for the better part of 10 years. For the next few years, Psygnosis' releases contained increasingly improved graphics, but were marred by similarly difficult gameplay and control methods. The original company headquarters were located at the Port of Liverpool Building at the Pier Head in Liverpool, but soon moved to Century Buildings in Liverpool's Brunswick Business Park, and later moved down the road to South Harrington Building by the docks.
Although Psygnosis primarily became a game publisher, some games were developed fully or partly in-house. During the early days, artists were employed full-time at the headquarters, offering third-party developers, who were often just single programmers, a high-quality art resource. This allowed Psygnosis to maintain high graphical standards across the board. The original artists were Garvan Corbett, Jeff Bramfitt, Colin Rushby and Jim Bowers, with Neil Thompson joining a little later.
Obliterator, released in 1988, contained an opening animation by Jim Bowers. This short scene would pave the way for increasingly sophisticated intro animations, starting with 2D hand drawn sequences, and progressing into FMV and 3D rendered movies created with Sculpt 4D on the Amiga. Eventually, Psygnosis would buy Silicon Graphics workstations for the sole purpose of creating these animations.
While most game companies of the mid-to-late 1980s were releasing identical games on both the Amiga and Atari ST, Psygnosis started to use the full potential of the Amiga's more powerful hardware to produce technically stunning games, with the landmark title Shadow of the Beast bringing the company its greatest success so far in 1989. Its multi-layered parallax scrolling and music were highly advanced for the time and as such led to the game being used as a showcase demonstration for the Amiga in many computer shops.
Psygnosis consolidated its fame after publishing the DMA Design Lemmings game franchise: debuting in 1991 on the Amiga, Lemmings was ported to a plethora of different computer and video game platforms, generating many sequels and variations of its concept through the years. Microcosm, a game that appeared on the FM Towns, Amiga CD32, and 3DO furthered the company's reputation for games with excellent graphics.
Psygnosis also created the "Face-Off" games in the Nickelodeon 1992 television game show, Nick Arcade, such as "Post Haste", "Jet Jocks" and "Battle of the Bands".
In 1993 the company was acquired by Sony Electronic Publishing. The acquisition cost Sony £20 million. In preparation for the September 1995 introduction of Sony's PlayStation console in Western markets, Psygnosis started creating games using the PlayStation as primary reference hardware. Among the most famous creations of this period were Wipeout, G-Police, and the Colony Wars series, some of which were ported to PC and to other platforms. The PlayStation marked a turning point in Psygnosis's game design, moving away from the prerendered graphics and limited gameplay that the company had become associated with. This was a successful period for the company; in the 1995–96 financial year, Psygnosis games accounted for 40% of all video games sales in Europe.
The acquisition was rewarding for Sony in another aspect: development kits for PlayStation consoles. As it had previously published PSY-Q development kits for various consoles by SN Systems, Psygnosis arranged for them to create a development system for the PS based on cheap PC hardware. Sony evaluated the system during CES in January 1994 and decided to adopt it.
As Psygnosis expanded after the Sony buyout, another satellite office was opened in Century Building with later offices opening in Stroud, London, Chester, Paris, Germany, and Foster City in California, now the home of Sony Computer Entertainment America. The company headquarters has resided at Wavertree Technology Park since 1995.
The Stroud studio was opened in November 1993 in order to attract disgruntled MicroProse employees. Staff grew from initially about 50 to about 70 in 1997. Among the titles created at Stroud are Overboard! and G-Police. The Wheelhouse—its publishing name—was closed in 2000 as part of the Sony Computer Entertainment takeover of Psygnosis. Some members joined Bristol-based Rage Software, but faced a similar demise a number of years later.
Despite being owned by Sony, Psygnosis retained a degree of independence from its parent company during this period and continued to develop and publish titles for other platforms, including the Sega Saturn and the Nintendo 64. This caused friction between Psygnosis and Sony, and in 1996 Sony engaged SBC Warburg's services in finding a buyer for Psygnosis. However, though bids reportedly went as high as $300 million, after six months Sony rescinded its decision to sell Psygnosis. Relations between the two companies had improved during this time, and Sony became reconciled to Psygnosis releasing games for competing platforms. Shortly after, Psygnosis took over distribution of its own titles, a task that Sony had been handling following the buyout.

Studio Camden

Psygnosis had a subsidiary studio at Camden Town which developed Blast Radius, Kingsley's Adventure and Team Buddies. It was moved to Sony as a separate studio named SCEE Studio Camden and released Dropship: United Peace Force before being merged with Team Soho into London Studio.

As Studio Liverpool

In 1999, a process to consolidate Psygnosis into Sony Computer Entertainment was underway, resulting in the bulk of Psygnosis' sales, marketing and PR staff being made redundant and the development teams reporting directly into Sony Computer Entertainment Europe's president of software development. To reflect this, in 2000, the Psygnosis brand was dropped in favour of SCE Studio Liverpool. During the year, as its American division was shut down, Midway Home Entertainment acquired the remaining titles of Psygnosis' PlayStation lineup.
The newly named SCE Studio Liverpool released its first title, Formula One 2001, in 2001. The game was also the studio's first release on the PlayStation 2, and the first entry in the Formula One series after taking over from developer Studio 33. From 2001 to 2007, Studio Liverpool released eight instalments in the series between the PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and PlayStation 3. However, Sony Computer Entertainment's exclusive licence with the Formula One Group expired, without renewal, before the 2007 season, marking the end of any further Formula One series instalments from the developer.
Studio Liverpool also developed Wipeout Fusion, the first of two instalments of the series on the PlayStation 2, released in 2002. Next they developed Wipeout Pure for the PlayStation Portable, which launched alongside the handheld in 2005 to significant acclaim, with many media outlets heralding it a return to glory for the series. They followed up with the sequel Wipeout Pulse in 2007 which was later ported to the PlayStation 2 and released in Europe.
In 2008 it released Wipeout HD, a downloadable title for the PlayStation 3's PlayStation Network service, consisting of various courses taken from both Wipeout Pure and Wipeout Pulse remade in high definition. An expansion pack for Wipeout HD named Wipeout HD Fury is available at PlayStation Network, including new game modes, new tracks, new music and new ship skins/models. In 2007, a copy of Manhunt 2 was leaked online prior to its release by an employee from the Sony Europe Liverpool office.
On 29 January 2010, Sony made a public statement on its restructuring of Studio Liverpool. The closure of Studio Liverpool was announced on 22 August 2012. In a press release, Sony stated that after an assessment of all European studios, it had decided to close Studio Liverpool. Sony said that the Liverpool site would remain in operation, as it is home to a number of Sony Worldwide Studios and SCEE Departments.
Eurogamer was told by an unnamed source that, at the time of its closure, Studio Liverpool was working on two PlayStation 4 launch titles. One was a Wipeout title described as "dramatically different"; the other was a motion capture-based game along the lines of Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell.

Spin-off studios

In 2013 a number of former Studio Liverpool employees formed two new studios: Firesprite, which worked on the visuals of The Playroom for the PlayStation 4, and Playrise Digital, who had success with their Table Top Racing games. In September 2021, Sony acquired Firesprite.

XDev

XDev, Sony's external development studio, is responsible for managing the development of titles at developers that are outside of Sony's own developer group. It has won 14 British Academy (BAFTA) video game awards and AIAS awards for LittleBigPlanet, 3 BAFTA awards for the Buzz! series and Develop Industry Excellence Awards for MotorStorm and Buzz!.

Games

Games developed or published as Psygnosis

YearNamePlatforms
BrataccasAmiga, Atari ST, Mac
Deep Space
BarbarianAmiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum
TerrorpodsAmiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, ZX Spectrum, MSX
BaalAmiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS
Captain Fizz Meets The Blaster-Trons
Chrono QuestAmiga, Atari ST
MenaceAmiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS
ObliteratorAmiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum
BallistixAcorn Electron, Amiga, Atari ST, BBC Micro, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, TurboGrafx-16
Blood MoneyAmiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS
NevermindAmiga
Shadow of the BeastAmiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
AnarchyAmiga, Atari ST
AtominoAmiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS
AwesomeAmiga, Atari ST, FM Towns
CarthageAmiga, Atari ST
InfestationAmiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS, FM Towns
The Killing Game ShowAmiga, Atari ST, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
Matrix MaraudersAmiga, Atari ST
NitroAmiga, Atari ST
Shadow of the Beast IIAmiga, Atari ST, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
Stryx
AmniosAmiga
Armour-GeddonAmiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS
Barbarian IIAmiga 500, Atari ST
Christmas Lemmings
LeanderAmiga, Atari ST, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
LemmingsAmiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum, Amiga CDTV, Super NES, Acorn Archimedes, NES, Sharp X68000, PC-98, TurboGrafx-CD, Atari Lynx, Master System, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Amstrad CPC, SAM Coupé, Commodore 64, Amiga CD32, Philips CD-i, Game Gear, Game Boy, 3DO, Windows 95, Apple Macintosh, PlayStation, Game Boy Color, Sony PSP, Sony PS3
ObitusAmiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS, Super NES
Oh No! More LemmingsAmiga, MS-DOS, Atari ST, SAM Coupé, Apple Macintosh, Acorn Archimedes
OrkAmiga, Atari ST
Superhero Amiga
Ultraverse: PrimeSega CD, Super Nintendo Entertainment System
AgonyAmiga
Air SupportAmiga, Atari ST
Aquaventura
Bill's Tomato GameAmiga, Atari ST
The Carl Lewis Challenge
CytronAmiga
Daughter of SerpentsMS-DOS
Red ZoneAmiga
Shadow of the Beast IIIAmiga
Bob's Bad DayAmiga
Bram Stoker's DraculaNES, Super NES, Game Boy, Game Gear, Master System, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Sega CD/Mega-CD, Amiga, MS-DOS
Combat Air PatrolAmiga, MS-DOS
CreepersMS-DOS
Global DominationMS-DOS, Amiga
GlobduleAmiga
Hired GunsAmiga, MS-DOS
Innocent Until CaughtAmiga, MS-DOS
Last Action HeroNES, Super NES, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Game Boy, Game Gear, Amiga, MS-DOS
Lemmings 2: The TribesAmiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Super NES, Game Boy, Acorn Archimedes, FM Towns
MicrocosmFM Towns, Sega CD/Mega-CD, 3DO, Amiga CD32, MS-DOS
Perihelion: The ProphecyAmiga
Prime Mover
Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the FlameMS-DOS, Mac OS, Super NES, FM Towns, Xbox
PuggsySega Genesis/Mega Drive, Sega CD/Mega-CD, Amiga
Theatre of Death
WalkerAmiga
Wiz 'n' Liz: The Frantic Wabbit WescueAmiga, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
3 Ninjas Kick BackSega Genesis/Mega Drive
Armour-Geddon 2: Codename HellfireAmiga
BenefactorAmiga, Amiga CD32
Brian the LionAmiga
EcstaticaMS-DOS
Hardcore Amiga, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
Hexx: Heresy of the WizardMS-DOS
Mary Shelley's FrankensteinSuper NES, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Sega CD/Mega-CD
Misadventures of FlinkCD32, Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Sega CD/Mega-CD
NovastormPlayStation, MS-DOS, FM-Towns, 3DO, Sega CD/Mega-CD
No EscapeSega Genesis/Mega Drive
Second SamuraiMega Drive, Amiga
3D LemmingsMS-DOS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn
3D Lemmings WinterlandMS-DOS
All New World of LemmingsAmiga, MS-DOS
Blue IceWindows
DarkerMS-DOS
Defcon 5MS-DOS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, 3DO
Destruction DerbyMS-DOS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, Nintendo 64
Diggers 2: ExtractorsMS-DOS
DiscworldMS-DOS, Mac OS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn
GuiltyMS-DOS
Pyrotechnica
SilverloadMS-DOS
WipeoutPlayStation
X-It
Adidas Power SoccerPlayStation
Assault RigsPlayStation, Sega Saturn, Windows
Chronicles of the SwordMS-DOS, PlayStation
Darkstalkers: The Night WarriorsArcade, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Network
Deadline
Destruction Derby 2MS-DOS, Windows, PlayStation
Discworld II: Mortality Bytes!MS-DOS, Windows, PlayStation, Sega Saturn
Formula 1PlayStation, Windows
Krazy IvanPlayStation, Sega Saturn, Windows
Lemmings PaintballWindows
Mickey's Wild AdventurePlayStation
The Adventures of LomaxPlayStation, Windows
Wipeout: 2097/Wipeout XLPlayStation
Adidas Power Soccer International 97PlayStation
AlundraPlayStation
Colony WarsPlayStation
Ecstatica IIMS-DOS, Windows
Formula 1 97PlayStation, Windows
G-PolicePlayStation, Windows
Lifeforce TenkaPlayStation, Windows
Overboard!Microsoft Windows, PlayStation
Professional Underground League of PainMS-DOS, PlayStation, Windows
Rosco McQueen Firefighter ExtremePlayStation
Rush HourPlayStation, Microsoft Windows
SentientPlayStation, MS-DOS, Windows
Shadow MasterPlayStation, Windows
Shipwreckers!Microsoft Windows, PlayStation
The City of Lost ChildrenMS-DOS, PlayStation
Thunder Truck RallyPlayStation, Windows
A Bug's LifePlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Adidas Power Soccer 98PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Blast RadiusPlayStation
Colony Wars: VengeancePlayStation
EliminatorPlayStation, Windows
Formula 1 98PlayStation
O.D.T. – Escape... Or Die TryingPlayStation, Windows
PsybadekPlayStation
RascalPlayStation
Roll AwayPlayStation, Android
Sentinel ReturnsWindows, PlayStation
Spice WorldPlayStation
Wipeout 64Nintendo 64
Zombieville
3X: The Science of War
Attack of the SaucermanPlayStation, Windows
Destruction Derby 64Nintendo 64
Drakan: Order of the FlameWindows
Eagle One: Harrier AttackPlayStation
Expert PoolWindows
Formula One 99PlayStation, Windows
G-Police: Weapons of JusticePlayStation
Kingsley's AdventurePlayStation
LanderWindows
Nations: WWII Fighter Command
Panzer EliteWindows
Pro 18 World Tour GolfPlayStation, Windows
Retro ForcePlayStation
RollcagePlayStation, Windows
Tellurian Defense
Wipeout 3PlayStation
Colony Wars: Red SunPlayStation
Destruction Derby RawPlayStation
Formula One 2000PlayStation, Game Boy Color
Lemmings RevolutionWindows
Metal FatigueWindows
Muppet Monster AdventurePlayStation
Muppet RaceManiaPlayStation
Rollcage Stage IIPlayStation, Windows
Team BuddiesPlayStation
Wipeout 3: Special EditionPlayStation