Puneet Varma (Editor)

Rocket Science Games

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Former type
  
Defunct

Website
  
www.rocketsci.com

Founder
  
Steve Blank

Ceased operations
  
1997

Defunct
  
1997

Headquarters
  
San Francisco

Founded
  
1993

Rocket Science Games httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen449Roc

Key people
  
Steve Blank, founder, CEO Peter Barrett Ron Cobb Michael Backes Bill Davis Will Harvey

Rocket science games defunct game developers in 5 games pt 221


Rocket Science Games was a video game developer that created games for consoles and computers from 1993 to 1997. The company was responsible for games such as Obsidian, Rocket Jockey, and Loadstar.

Contents

Rocket science games promotional video


History

Rocket Science Games (RSG) was an independent game studio founded by Steven Gary Blank and Peter Barrett in 1993 to combine the creative forces of Hollywood and Silicon Valley into compelling cinematic videogames. Sega Enterprises and the Bertelsmann Music Group infused RSG with $12 million in funding in May 1994, thus becoming RSG's North American and European publishers, respectively. Staffed with some of the brightest rising stars of the computer, comics and movie industries, RSG created a huge buzz even before the release of their first titles and claimed to be an on the verge of revolutionizing the video game industry using full motion video (FMV). Founded at the height of the FMV video game craze of the '90s, their first three games utilized the technology heavily. As a backlash grew against the technology, the games received mixed reviews and suffered poor sales. RSG then shifted away from consoles and FMV to concentrate on more traditional PC games.

After the disappointing sales of their early games RSG received much needed funds from SegaSoft, who then became the sole publisher for their titles in development. Sega canceled about half of the titles RSG was working on to reduce costs and speed up releases, with a noticeable negative effect on their quality. Rocket Jockey shipped missing Local area network support that had been heavily promoted to the press and was even advertised on the box, but wouldn't be patched into the game for several months. Obsidian also suffered quality problems as it had several bugs present at the time of its release, including a few that prevented completion of the game. While some of the SegaSoft games were critically acclaimed, none of them did particularly well financially, and unable to secure additional funding, RSG was forced to close down in 1997.

About a year before closing its doors, in February 1996, RSG announced a partnership with CyberCash, Inc. to launch a virtual arcade service based on micropayments. CyberCash, a virtual currency company, would provide the financial infrastructure for the arcade and use it to jump-start their micropayment "electronic coin service". This announcement was heavily circulated by the media and, along with several other micropayment based services, was heralded as the next big thing in Internet commerce. The arcade was to be based on RSG "V3 Internet game engine" and feature at least 20 classic arcade games with a launch as early as the second half of 1996. The unnamed service was never given a firm launch date nor were any specific titles mentioned. After the initial flurry of excitement the partnership failed to produce any further announcements and the service was never heard from again. It may have been a casualty of the cuts SegaSoft made later that same year when they acquired RSG. Later SegaSoft partnered with CyberCash and used their micropayment system, now named the CyberCoin service, for their Heat.net online gaming service. Heat.net was shut down in 2000 when SegaSoft was restructured into Sega.com and CyberCash filed for bankruptcy a year later.

Written by game designer Steve Meretzky of Infocom fame, The Space Bar by Boffo Games was originally to be published by RSG but was transferred to SegaSoft after RSG closed its doors. Darwin Pond was an unreleased title that was completed before the fall of RSG but was never commercially released; later its creator Jeffrey Ventrella released it for free over the Internet (a new version of Darwin Pond is currently being developed by Ventrella and Brian Dodd, who worked together at RSG; it is currently in a very early stage of development). Lastly, Rocket Jockey still receives some media and developer attention, with five different remake efforts on record, mostly games modded to recreate the original gameplay. In 2011, Arstechnica revisited the game in an article titled "Masterpiece: Rocket Jockey for the PC -- you heard me."

Released (by date)

  • Loadstar: The Legend of Tully Bodine
  • Cadillacs and Dinosaurs: The Second Cataclysm
  • Wing Nuts: Battle in the Sky
  • Rocket Jockey
  • Obsidian
  • The Space Bar
  • Unreleased (alphabetical)

  • Dark Ride
  • Darwin Pond
  • Ganymede
  • Loadstar II: Showdown on Phobos
  • Pest!
  • Rocket Boy
  • References

    Rocket Science Games Wikipedia