Bizarre Creations Limited was a British video game development studio based in Liverpool, best known for its racing titles Metropolis Street Racer (Dreamcast) and the follow-up Project Gotham Racing series (Xbox, Xbox 360, mobile phones and Zune HD). The company has also developed games in other genres, including the Geometry Wars arcade series, plus the third-person shooters Fur Fighters and The Club. Bizarre Creations was acquired by publisher Activision in 2007, and subsequently completed its racer Blur in May 2010.
On 20 January 2011, Activision announced Bizarre Creations would close, and later confirmed the date. Bizarre marked the closure by releasing a retrospective video of its work.
History
Bizarre Creations started as Raising Hell Software, founded by Martyn Chudley. Sega scorned "Hell", and the company went nameless for a short time. In 1994, a pending submission to Psygnosis/Sony forced the decision of a new name. The founder tentatively left "Weird Concepts" on the submission documentation. Then a staff member used Microsoft Word's thesaurus, and "Bizarre Creations" stuck.
The Bizarre Creations team was initially five strong, and worked on a concept project called "Slaughter". After seeing the demo, Psygnosis signed the team onto Formula 1 for PlayStation. Formula 1 went on to become the best-selling game in Europe in 1996.
On 26 September 2007, publisher Activision acquired Bizarre Creations[2] for $107.4m; $67.4m immediately payable with a further $40m contingent hitting certain goals over a 5-year period.[3]
Activision announced that Project Gotham Racing 4 would be Bizarre Creations' last game for Microsoft Game Studios,[4] and Microsoft did retain the rights for the Project Gotham Racing franchise.
On 16 November 2010, Activision announced it was considering closing Bizarre and "exploring our options regarding the future of the studio, including a potential sale of the business".[5] Activision later stated that no buyer could be found and that the studio would close.[6] The studio would conclude with a two-minute farewell video, put together by in-house editor Eamon Urtone.[7][8][9][10]
Pete Collier, Ben Ward and Stephen Cakebread of Bizarre Creations founded mobile game developer Hogrocket in 2011, and shut it down the following year.[11] A week after the closure of the studio, many former employees went on to found Lucid Games, which continued development on the Geometry Wars franchise, among various other ventures.[12]
Games developed
Cancelled Games
- Blur 2[14]
External links
References
- Former members of Bizarre Creations found a new studio Gamerant, February 25, 2011, retrieved October 26, 2021^
- Hello Activision! Bizarre to spearhead exciting new projects... Bizarre Creations, September 26, 2007^
- Bizarre Creations for Activision_Blizzard (ATVI) Wikinvest.com, retrieved 3 November 2016^
- Ben Parfitt. Activision buys Bizarre Develop, 26 September 2007^
- Van Autrijve. Activision Looking To Close Or Sell Bizarre Creations WorthPlaying, 16 November 2010^
- Dutton. Activision finalises Bizarre closure News Eurogamer, 19 January 2011, retrieved 15 May 2011^
- Wesley Yin-Poole. Bizarre says goodbye with farewell video Eurogamer, 18 February 2011^
- Andy Chalk. Bizarre Creations Says a Video Goodbye The Escapist, 18 February 2011^
- Jeff Mattas. Bizarre Creations Video Editor Makes Beautiful Farewell Clip Shacknews, February 18, 2011^
- Eamon Urtone. Farewell Bizarre...it's been an absolute pleasure! February 17, 2011^
- Mike Rose. UK indie studio Hogrocket closes down Gamasutra, November 23, 2012^
- Matt Martin. Former Bizarre Creations staff form Lucid Games GamesIndustry.biz, 25 February 2011, retrieved 7 December 2021^
- James Bond 007: Bloodstone confirmed GameSpot, 16 July 2010, retrieved 16 July 2010^
- Blur 2 (Bizarre Creations) [Cancelled – Xbox 360, PS3, PC] Unseen64, October 19, 2020, retrieved June 11, 2024^