Ruffian Games

Ruffian Games
Industry Video game industry
Founded December 2008
Headquarters Dundee, Scotland, UK [1]
Key people
Gaz Liddon (studio head)
Billy Thomson (creative director)
Products Video games
Website http://www.ruffiangames.com

Ruffian Games is a British video game developer founded in 2008.[2] The developer was formed by two members, Billy Thomson and Gaz Liddon, of the video game developer Realtime Worlds. Ruffian Games originally consisted of members from Realtime Worlds and Xen Studios, among others.[2] They have made Crackdown 2, the sequel to the 2007 video game, Crackdown.

History

Ruffian Games was officially formed in December 2008. The studio was founded by Billy Thomson (now Creative Director) and Gaz Liddon (now Studio Head).[3] The team consisted of developers who "have worked on games like Crackdown, Fable II and Project Gotham Racing".[1] Before the "official" announcement, however, rumors circulated that a studio was in development of the sequel to the Realtime Worlds game, Crackdown. As early as December 2008, rumors emerged that Ruffian Games was formed to create a sequel to Crackdown.[4] In light of these rumors, Realtime Worlds issued a statement claiming that they "'continue to have ongoing discussions' with Microsoft about a Crackdown sequel, although no offer has been made". The rumors, however, ousted Ruffian Games as a Microsoft-funded developer.[5]

After the announcement, not much news circulated regarding the project the developer was currently working on. The developer was keeping its current project under wraps: "Now we're in full production, we're itching to share the fantastic work these guys have been producing" stated Liddon.[6] On 22 May 2009, it was announced that the developer had added 15 new members to its team.[7]

At Microsoft's 2009 E3 conference, Ruffian Games announced their project to be Crackdown 2, which was released 6 July 2010 in North America.[8]

Ruffian Games is made up of a large amount of former Realtime Worlds employees, who moved to this studio after the failure of APB: All Points Bulletin, the main cause of Realtime Worlds' collapse.

The developer was reported to be working on a reboot of the Streets of Rage series for Sega as a digital download title. However, former employee Sean Noonan, while confirming the rumor about the game, stated it was a prototype developed in eight weeks by a small group of employees of the developer.[9]

On 19 February 2013, Ruffian Games revealed their new self-published project Tribal Towers. They also confirmed they weren't currently working on a sequel to the Crackdown franchise.[10]

On 27 January 2014, Ruffian Games announced that Tribal Towers had evolved into a new project entitled Game of Glens.[11] It was announced alongside Square Enix's new venture 'Collective', in which it was one of the 3 launch titles that users could vote on to gather interest in the game.[12]

On 12 August 2014, Ruffian Games revealed Hollowpoint for PlayStation 4 and PC during Sony’s Gamescom press conference. The game is published by Paradox Interactive.[13]

Games

Year Title Publisher Platform
2010 Crackdown 2 Microsoft Studios Xbox 360
2012 Kinect Playfit Microsoft Studios Xbox 360
TBA Fragmental Ruffian Games Microsoft Windows

Collaborative games

Title Lead Developer Publisher Year Platform
Kinect Star Wars Terminal Reality Microsoft Studios 2012 Xbox 360
Nike+ Kinect Training Sumo Digital Microsoft Studios 2012 Xbox 360
Kinect Sesame Street TV Soho Productions Microsoft Studios 2013 Xbox 360
Kinect Sports Rivals Rare Ltd. Microsoft Studios 2014 Xbox One
Halo: The Master Chief Collection 343 Industries Microsoft Studios 2014 Xbox One

References

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