Cryo Interactive
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Cryo Interactive Entertainment | |
Type | Unknown |
---|---|
Founded | Paris, France (1992) |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Industry | Computer and video games |
Products | Dune Lost Eden Atlantis: The Lost Tales Ring Frank Herbert's Dune |
Subsidiaries | Cryo Studios North America Dreamcatcher Interactive |
Cryo Interactive Entertainment was a French video game development and publishing company founded in 1992, but existing unofficially since 1989 as a developer group under the name Cryo. Cryo was formed by members of ERE Informatique who left Infogrames (proprietor of ERE since 1986) — among these were Philippe Ulrich, Rémi Herbulot and Jean-Martial Lefranc.
The first game developed under the Cryo Interactive moniker was the hit Dune, which granted the newly-formed software company both publicity and funding for further games under Virgin until 1996, when Cryo started self-publishing inside the European market, and in North America through then partially-owned Canadian publisher DreamCatcher Interactive.
Cryo made its name mostly through adaptations of already existing stories (such as Riverworld, based on Philip José Farmer's novel and Ubik by Philip K. Dick) or those based on historical scenarios (like KGB, a game set days before the collapse of the Soviet Union and several games based in Ancient Egypt, Qing Dynasty's China and Louis XIV's France, developed with Cryo's Omni3D engine). Although most of the post-Virgin games managed to capture and stay true to the original settings, poor interfaces and the lack of worldwide distribution turned little profit from each game.
In 2002, not long after Frank Herbert's Dune flopped, Cryo's situation was no longer sustainable, and the company was declared bankrupt. Ironically, after much negotiation, most of the assets and development teams of Cryo Interactive were absorbed by DreamCatcher Interactive, forming the base for DreamCatcher Europe.
[edit] Published titles
- 1991: Extase (as Cryo)
- 1992: Dune
- 1992: KGB
- 1993: MegaRace
- 1994: Dragon Lore
- 1994: Commander Blood (sequel to Captain Blood)
- 1995: Aliens: A Comic Book Adventure
- 1995: Lost Eden
- 1996: Hardline
- 1996: MegaRace 2
- 1997: Dragon Lore II
- 1997: Versailles 1685
- 1997: Hard Boiled
- 1997: Atlantis: The Lost Tales
- 1997: The 3rd Millennium
- 1997: Dreams: To Reality
- 1997: Egypt 1156 B.C. - Tomb of the Pharaoh
- 1997: Pax Corpus
- 1997: Big Bug Bang (sequel to Commander Blood)
- 1998: Ubik
- 1998: ZeroZone
- 1998: Atlantis: The Lost World
- 1998: Riverworld
- 1999: Ring
- 1999: 360: Three Sixty
- 1999: S.A.G.A.: Rage of the Vikings
- 1999: China: The Forbidden City
- 1999: The Guardian Of Darkness
- 1999: VIRUS: It Is Aware...
- 1999: Jekyll and Hyde
- 2000: Asterix & Obelix Take On Caesar
- 2000: Hellboy: Dogs of the Night
- 2000: The New Adventures of The Time Machine
- 2000: Aztec
- 2000: Beyond Atlantis
- 2000: The Devil Inside
- 2001: Egypt II - The Heliopolis Prophecy
- 2001: Necronomicon: The Dawning Of Darkness
- 2001: Roland Garros French Open 2001
- 2001: Frank Herbert's Dune
- 2002: Curse of Atlantis: Thorgal's Quest
- 2002: MegaRace 3 - Nanotech Disaster
- 2002: The Mystery of the Nautilus
- 2002: Pink Panther: Pinkadelic Pursuit
- 2002: Atlantis III: The New World (also known as Beyond Atlantis II)
- 2002: Salammbo: Battle for Carthage (finished independently after Cryo's bankruptcy)
- 2004: Atlantis Evolution (developed by Atlantis Interactive, a company that is the only remaining of Cryo today)
[edit] Unreleased titles
[edit] External links
- Interview with Ghislain Pages, Commercial Director for DreamCatcher Europe at Adventure Gamers (2003-03-07)
- Cryo Interactive profile on MobyGames