Digital Anvil, Inc. (formerly Digital Anvil Holdings, Inc.) was an American
video game developer
A video game developer is a broad term for a software developer specializing in video game development – the process and related disciplines of creating video games. A game developer can range from one person who undertakes all tasks to a large ...
based in
Austin, Texas owned by
Microsoft Game Studios
Xbox Game Studios (previously known as Microsoft Studios, Microsoft Game Studios, and Microsoft Games) is an American video game publisher and part of the Microsoft Gaming division based in Redmond, Washington. It was established in March 2000, ...
(MGS). It was founded in 1996 by brothers
Chris and Erin Roberts along with Tony Zurovec, Marten Davies, Craig Cox, John Miles, Eric Peterson and Robert Rodriguez, creators of the ''
Wing Commander'' franchise from
Origin Systems.
Davies held the position of
president of the studio from its founding until February 2000, when his departure was announced. In June 2000, Microsoft started talks to buy Digital Anvil. Roberts admitted that his team required large sums of money, which only a huge company could provide. The acquisition of Digital Anvil by MGS was completed in December of that same year.
History
Digital Anvil was founded in 1996 by
Chris Roberts, Erin Roberts, Tony Zurovec, Marten Davies, Craig Cox, John Miles, Eric Peterson, and Robert Rodriguez. The name derived from the team's idea to provide "hard work and high tech".
Digital Anvil offered profit-related pay to encourage creative drive and give employees a sense of ownership in the company.
Digital Anvil was purchased by
Microsoft on December 5, 2000. One of the consequences of Digital Anvil's purchase was a reshuffling of titles being developed. ''
Conquest: Frontier Wars'' and ''Loose Cannon'' were dropped by the company, eventually being picked up by
Ubisoft. ''Conquest'' was released in 2001. Many of the Digital Anvil staff working on ''Loose Cannon'' were reassigned to the company's flagship ''Freelancer''. ''
Brute Force
Brute Force or brute force may refer to:
Techniques
* Brute force method or proof by exhaustion, a method of mathematical proof
* Brute-force attack, a cryptanalytic attack
* Brute-force search, a computer problem-solving technique
People
* Brut ...
'' (still unannounced at the time) was switched from a computer game to an
Xbox exclusive. Of all the projects being produced, only ''Freelancer'' escaped major change. Co-founder Chris Roberts left the company after the Microsoft takeover, but he still worked as a consultant on ''Freelancer''. Digital Anvil also worked on the visual effects of the 1999 film ''
Wing Commander''.
For the next year, Digital Anvil was mostly silent, and many wondered whether any games from the company would see the light of day. Then, in 2001, Digital Anvil revealed a lighter ''Freelancer'' to the press. Although some of the more ambitious elements were dropped, this act proved ''Freelancer'' was not vaporware. In March 2003, ''Freelancer'' was released and immediately became one of the month's top-selling games. In May of the same year, Digital Anvil released ''Brute Force'' for the Xbox. The game also did quite well, setting first-month sales records for Xbox games. In November 2005, Microsoft redeployed the developer's employees to its
Microsoft Studios headquarters. Digital Anvil was officially dissolved on January 31, 2006.
Hartman, the studio head of Digital Anvil at the time of its closure, was moved from Austin to Redmond as head of
Turn 10 Studios, authors of the ''
Forza Motorsport'' franchise.
Games
References
External links
Digital Anvil, Inc. pageMicrosoft Games page
{{Authority control
1996 establishments in Texas
2000 mergers and acquisitions
2006 disestablishments in Texas
American companies established in 1996
American companies disestablished in 2006
Companies based in Austin, Texas
Defunct companies based in Texas
Defunct video game companies of the United States
Former Microsoft subsidiaries
Video game companies based in Texas
Video game companies established in 1996
Video game companies disestablished in 2006
Video game development companies