Cinemaware
Cinemaware was a video game developer and publisher. It had released several titles in the 1980s based on various film themes. The company was resurrected in 2000, before being acquired by eGames in 2005.
Cinemaware Corp. (1986–1991)
The company was founded in January 1986 by Phyllis and Robert “Bob” Jacob. Cinemaware's first title was Defender of the Crown, a strategy computer game originally released for the Commodore Amiga. Bob Jacob was a film buff, and Cinemaware released other games based on classic film genres which were made as an attempt to emphasize action, graphics, and ease of play. Its games generally debuted on the most graphically powerful home computers of the era, the Amiga, Apple IIGS, and Atari ST, and then ported to others, such as the Commodore 64, PC, and the Nintendo Entertainment System. Defender of the Crown is the most ported Cinemaware game.Cinemaware expanded to sports games, with its "TV Sports" line, which featured elements of sports telecasts such as studio announcers. The "TV Sports" line covered basketball, ice hockey, and football. Some of the titles were only known by the generic name "TV Sports" in Europe such asTV Sports: Boxing and TV Sports: Baseball, which were released in the United States by Data East as ABC Wide World of Sports Boxing and Bo Jackson Baseball, respectively. In 1989, the company debuted its Spotlight Software label in order to release foreign titles for the American market, most notably Speedball.
By 1990, the NEC owned 15% of Cinemaware. Cinemaware went bankrupt in 1991. While porting S.D.I. to another system, one of the company's owners demanded the programmers add more features, increasing the programming time and delaying the product's release. Coupled with falling sales of their other titles amid an economic downturn, the company suffered. The company also suffered from software piracy, threatening to stop publishing Amiga games at several points because of the ease by which video games could be copied. Many of their games, including Wings, were cracked and spread amongst gamers before release.
Releases
Cinemaware's titles include the following:- Defender of the Crown
- S.D.I.
- The King of Chicago
- Sinbad and the Throne of the Falcon
- The Three Stooges
- Rocket Ranger
- TV Sports: Football
- Lords of the Rising Sun
- Disney's Cartoon Arcade
- It Came from the Desert
- TV Sports: Baseball
- TV Sports: Basketball
- Antheads: It Came from the Desert 2
- Wings
- ''TV Sports: Boxing''
Cinemaware Inc. (2000–2005)
The new Cinemaware developed newer versions of their classic games. Their first game in this endeavor was Robin Hood: Defender of the Crown, featuring an improved 3D engine and was released in September 2003 for Windows, PlayStation 2, and Xbox. Since the 1.02 patch for Robin Hood: Defender of the Crown in December 2003, Cinemaware has made no official announcements for its other games. One developer made a statement in the website's forums in October 2004 stating Cinemaware is still working on these projects, but no other announcements have been made since.
Releases
- Robin Hood: Defender of the Crown
- Defender of the Crown
- The Three Stooges
- Wings
- Torrente
- Defender of the Crown: Digitally Remastered Edition
- The Three Stooges: Digitally Remastered Edition
- Wings: Digitally Remastered Edition
- Lords of the Rising Sun: Digitally Remastered Edition
- ''Wings Remastered''
Acquisition
Cinemaware rights acquisition by Starbreeze (2016)
In May 2016, Swedish game developer and publisher Starbreeze acquired all Cinemaware intellectual property rights from Cinemaware.- The Cinemaware brand
- Defender of the Crown
- Wings
- The King of Chicago
- Sinbad and the Throne of the Falcon
- Lords of the Rising Sun
- Rocket Ranger
- It Came from the Desert
- Antheads: It Came from the Desert 2
- S.D.I.
- TV Sports: Basketball
- TV Sports: Baseball
- TV Sports: Boxing
- TV Sports: Football
- TV Sports: Hockey