Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Frontier Developments

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Type
  
Public

Industry
  
Video game industry

Headquarters
  
Cambridge, United Kingdom

Revenue
  
21.4 million GBP (2016)

Net income
  
1.3 million GBP (2016)

Traded as
  
LSE: FDEV

Area served
  
Worldwide

Number of employees
  
300 (2016)

Founder
  
David Braben

Formerly called
  
Frontier Developments Ltd. (1994–2013)

Key people
  
David Braben (CEO) David Walsh (COO) Jonny Watts (CCO)

Stock price
  
FDEV (LON) 300.00 GBX +6.00 (+2.04%)17 Mar, 5:30 PM GMT - Disclaimer

Founded
  
28 January 1994, Cambridge, United Kingdom

Video games
  
Elite: Dangerous, Frontier: Elite II, Planet Coaster, RollerCoaster Tycoon 3, Frontier: First Encounters

Profiles

Elite dangerous on kickstarter


Frontier Developments plc (formerly Frontier Developments Ltd.) is a British video game developer based in Cambridge, England founded in January 1994. The company is headed by David Braben as chief executive officer. It has produced several games in the Elite series, including 2014's Elite: Dangerous. A second studio, Frontier Developments Inc., was opened in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada in August 2012, headed by David Walsh as its president, and closed in January 2015. In 2013, the company reincorporated as a public limited company, and entered the stock market.

Contents

History

Frontier Developments' first game was the 1993 Amiga CD32 port of the largely successful Frontier: Elite II followed by Frontier: First Encounters, second sequel to the seminal 1984 game Elite by Acornsoft. The company describes the original Elite as a "Game by Frontier", in its back catalogue during the company's 2013 sale of shares to the public, with David Braben owning all rights to the game assigned to the company in 2008.

Between 2005 and 2011, the company experienced a turmoil while developing it's next generation title The Outsider. Its feature list was ambitious from its initial announcement, although little was seen of the game in public following this. The project was initially self-funded by the developer but failed to maintain publisher backing. When Codemasters withdrew from the deal the studio was also forced to make 17 staff members redundant. Although Braben didn't describe the project as "cancelled", it is commonly assumed the project is on indefinite hold.

Frontier Developments had been planning a new Elite sequel, under the working title Elite 4, since 1998. The company completed a successful Kickstarter campaign at the end of 2012, where the new sequel's name Elite: Dangerous was revealed. Early-access versions of the game have been playable by backers since December 2013. The full game was released to PC on 16 December 2014.

Frontier Developments has made many other games, including Dog's Life, Thrillville, and RollerCoaster Tycoon 3. The company also made games for the Wallace and Gromit franchise, and has released Wallace & Gromit in Project Zoo, and a tie-in game for Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit. In 2008, Frontier released LostWinds, a launch title for Nintendo's WiiWare platform. It received critical acclaim, scoring 81% on Metacritic. It was followed up with a sequel in 2009, entitled LostWinds: Winter of the Melodias, which scored 86% on Metacritic. In 2010, Frontier developed Kinectimals for Microsoft's Kinect controller on the Xbox 360. In 2011 Kinect Disneyland Adventures and Kinectimals: Now With Bears were developed, along with ports of LostWinds for iOS and Kinectimals for iOS and Windows Phone. In 2012, Frontier released Coaster Crazy, and started to work on Elite: Dangerous Kickstarter, which successfully closed at the very start of 2013. In 2013, Frontier released Xbox One/Xbox 360 exclusive Zoo Tycoon, published by Microsoft Studios, and launched backers alpha for Elite: Dangerous in December. In 2015 the company released Screamride, a theme park construction and management simulation game for the Xbox 360 and Xbox One. The company has recently released Planet Coaster, a construction and management simulation video game similar to the RollerCoaster Tycoon franchise. The game is the second major self-published franchises from Frontier along with the Elite series. Frontier announced that they will begin self-publishing all their future games, starting with Planet Coaster.

On January 3, 2017, TMZ reported that the company sued Atari, Inc. for not paying the company enough for royalties for their game RollerCoaster Tycoon 3; Frontier reported that they only received $1.17 million when they needed $3.37 million. David Walsh confirmed the report in a GameSpot interview, stating that they had previously attempted to resolve the issue without legal action since April 2016.

On February 6, 2017, Frontier announced that they had acquired licensing rights from an unnamed Hollywood movie studio to be used in their third self-published title. The only clue as to what this title may be was teased in the statement that it would be an "enduring movie franchise of global renown" and further details would follow later in 2017.

References

Frontier Developments Wikipedia


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