Sierra Entertainment
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Sierra Entertainment | |
Type | Private |
---|---|
Founded | 1979 |
Headquarters | Los Angeles, CA, U.S. |
Key people | Martin Tremblay, President |
Industry | Computer and video game industry |
Products | King's Quest Space Quest Leisure Suit Larry Spyro the Dragon Gabriel Knight (full list in article) |
Employees | 510 |
Parent | Vivendi SA |
Slogan | N/A |
Website | Sierra.com |
Sierra Entertainment, a publishing label of Vivendi Games, creates interactive entertainment for personal computers, videogame systems and handheld gaming devices. Sierra has a portfolio of titles based on original IP and licenses. The Sierra logo is an umbrella for four studios providing: High Moon Studios in San Diego, CA; Massive Entertainment in Malmo, Sweden; Radical Entertainment in Vancouver, B.C.; and Swordfish Studios in Birmingham and Manchester, England. As of 2006, all Vivendi SA mainline games are distributed under the Sierra brand.
Contents
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[edit] History
[edit] 1979–1983
The history of Sierra Entertainment started back in 1979 in the home of Ken and Roberta Williams, an ordinary couple in their mid-20s, living in Simi Valley in the Greater Los Angeles area with their two young sons D.J. and Chris.
At the time, Ken was working as a contract programmer for IBM, developing an income tax program on a mainframe computer 3,000 miles away from L.A. One night he found a program labeled Adventure on the mainframe. Curious of what it could be, he downloaded it and it turned out to be a copy of Colossal Caves. Back in the days of the ARPAnet this game was very famous. It was the first true "interactive fiction" computer game. Ken (as so many other people who saw the game) was fascinated with it.
Roberta wasn't very interested in computers at the time, but Ken showed her the game on a terminal he had brought home from work. Roberta, who had been a big fairy tale and adventure fiction lover ever since her childhood, was instantly hooked in this new breed of storytelling and played her way through Colossal Cave with great enthusiasm.
For Christmas 1979, Ken bought a $2,000 Apple II microcomputer with a whopping (for its day) 64k of memory, an 85k floppy disk drive and a monochrome monitor. He was planning to use it to develop a FORTRAN compiler for Apple computers.
At the time, a company called Adventure International developed text adventure games for the Apple II. Roberta played their games, but even though she liked them, she wasn't entirely content with the adventure games that existed at the time. She realized that this medium had the possibilities to do even more than presenting text descriptions on the screen. Since modern computers could display graphics, instead of telling the player “You are standing in front of a house” a picture of the house could be displayed on the screen. The games could use better plots too, making them even more interesting to play.
[edit] Mystery House
Roberta sat down in front of the kitchen table and started to write down her ideas. Three weeks later she presented to Ken the script of a computer game called Mystery House, an idea she had developed during the previous days, in between watching the kids (D.J. was seven at the time and Chris was only one year old) and doing other everyday household stuff. The game would revolve around a murder mystery, where you as the player would be trapped overnight in an old house together with seven other people, one of whom would be a killer. But who? The house would also contain a hidden treasure that the player had to find. (Inspiration was taken from the famous Agatha Christie story And Then There Were None and the parlor game Clue.) At first, Ken wasn't very excited about her idea, but eventually Roberta caught his attention, especially when she said she wanted the game to contain pictures instead of just text.
Roberta managed to talk Ken into helping her develop the game in the evenings after work. Ken figured out a way to fit the amount of graphics she wanted into the very limited memory of their Apple II computer and created the tools needed to draw it, as there still were no drawing programs available on the market. They bought a crude graphics tablet with a mechanic arm that could transfer a drawing on paper to a computer image. Ken also programmed the logic code needed in the game. Roberta worked on the text and the graphics and told Ken how to put it all together to make it the game she wanted. She did the quality assurance of the game herself.
They worked on it for about three months and in May 5, 1980, Mystery House was finally ready for shipment. They placed a small ad in Micro Magazine, made copies of the game themselves and packaged them in small square folders, sealed inside Ziploc bags. The box art was designed by Roberta's mother Nova, who was a good oil painter. The games were then distributed to the only four software stores available in Los Angeles County at the time by Ken and Roberta personally. It cost $24.95 and was distributed under Ken's company name On-Line systems.
With their first computer game done, Ken and Roberta started to make plans for the future. They thought that if they could just write games popular enough to earn them about $40,000 a year, they could move out of Los Angeles in a few years and live in a “log cabin in the woods”, working together at home, making computer games and raising their children in a peaceful and beautiful environment close to nature instead of the big and busy city of L.A. They had no idea that this humble dream would be a heavy understatement to what was actually going to happen to them in the following years.
Mystery House was an instant hit. The graphics, although consisting only of crude line drawings, monochrome and motionless, was something previously unseen in an computer game, and people loved it. The orders were pouring in and so was the money. By August 1980, Mystery House had already sold enough copies to enable Ken and Roberta to move out of L.A. They bought a house in Coarsegold, a small gold mining town in the Sierra Nevada foothills just south of Yosemite National Park, where Roberta's parents John and Nova owned an apple orchard.
Mystery House was the first computer game to have graphics, and as such is considered a classic game and a landmark achievement in computer gaming history. It sold about 15,000 copies and earned $167,000, an unprecedented number for the time. Ken and Roberta who had not anticipated this huge popularity of the game would constantly get telephone calls day and night by people who wanted to buy the game. They realized that suddenly 30-40,000 people had become aware of their home phone number. After about 6 months they moved to the small mountain town of Oakhurst, seven miles north of Coarsegold. Chaos lasted for about three more months in their new home until they rented an office, located on top of a print shop. Their first employee was John Williams, Ken's brother, and the early On-Line systems staff consisted mostly of friends and relatives of the couple.
[edit] Wizard and the Princess
Ken and Roberta's second adventure game was Wizard and the Princess, a game with a story based on the many fairy tales Roberta used to read as a child. This game was an improvement from Mystery House mainly because it had color graphics. It's possible that it was the first computer game ever to have color graphics (it was the first adventure game with color) and sold over 60,000 copies. The Apple II could only display six different colors simultaneously, but clever use of dithering made it possible to give the illusion of more colors on the screen.
Wizard and the Princess was also released for the Atari 8-bit, the Commodore 64 and, in 1982, for the IBM PC, then under the name Adventures in Serenia.
Mystery House and Wizard and the Princess were the first two in a series of about ten games released between 1980 and 1982 called the Hi-res Adventures. Roberta and Ken were involved in the design of most of them.
[edit] Time Zone
In 1981, Roberta broke the barriers of computer gaming again with the release of Time Zone, which spanned six double-sided disks. It held the record for being the largest computer game ever made for about seven years. While the average adventure game of the time usually had around 90 "rooms", Time Zone had around 1400. This game was also the first On-Line systems game with graphics drawn by professional artists and took a full year to make. The game even earned special recognition by the Smithsonian Institution. It was first sold for $99.95, but that was too expensive for most consumers. The game didn't sell very well in the beginning and the price had to be lowered.
Sometime around this period, On-Line systems changed their name to Sierra On-Line, relating to their location in the Sierra Nevada area. They also adopted the shape of Half Dome, one of Yosemite's most spectacular and famous landmarks, in their logotype.
[edit] The Dark Crystal
Roberta wrote The Dark Crystal in 1982, a game based on Muppets creator Jim Henson's animated movie The Dark Crystal. It was released under a new company brand: SierraVenture. Some of the earlier games, including Mystery House and Wizard and the Princess, were also re-released under this new brand and were packaged in more professional-looking boxes. The Dark Crystal was later released in a simplified version intended for younger players as The Gelfling Adventure. This game was the first one made by Al Lowe, who would become one of Sierra On-Line's most famous game designers. The Dark Crystal was the first computer game to be based on a movie.
Along with Sierra On-Line, Infocom developed pure text adventure games. Without graphics, they could utilize computer memory to develop much better text parsers than Sierra On-Line, which enabled the player to write long and complicated sentences in the games.
Next to the adventure games, Ken and Roberta's company also released a number of very successful arcade games on license, such as Frogger and Jawbreaker. These games were sold under the SierraVision label. They even released a few non-entertainment software products, such as the HomeWord Speller word processor. Ken was working hard during this initial period of the company to gain understanding of the digital entertainment industry so he could lead the company in the right direction. His opinion of computer games had changed dramatically. Hundreds of letters from all over the country had told Ken and Roberta that the games they were making were important to people. Even Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, a real hero in Ken's eyes, sent them a letter and told them what a delight it was to see their games run on the Apple II.
[edit] 1984–1985
In the early 80s, a large number of companies fought to become the leaders in the new and very attractive market of home computing. Venture capitalists had seized some control of Sierra On-Line after lending Sierra On-Line money for the development of early games. They wanted the company to turn their attention towards cartridge-based computers, and invested lots of venture capital on the development of software for systems such as the Atari VCS, Coleco Adam and VIC-20. These investments did not pan out, and in mid-1984 Sierra On-Line was on the brink of bankruptcy. Stuck with piles of cartridges for millions of dollars that no one wanted to buy, the history of Sierra On-Line nearly ended.
[edit] King's Quest
Around a year before the disaster, Sierra On-Line had been contacted by IBM to create a showcase game for their new PCjr. IBM would fund the entire development of the game, pay royalties for it and advertise for the game on TV. They wanted a ground-breaking game. It was a great opportunity, but also a big risk for Sierra On-Line. Ken and Roberta accepted and started right away on the project.
In the spirit of Wizard and the Princess, Roberta created with a story based on classic fairy-tale elements where a knight would have to save a kingdom in distress by recovering three lost treasures. Her game concept included animated color graphics, a pseudo 3D-perspective where you could see the main character on the screen and be able to control his movements with the arrow keys on the keyboard, a much more competent text parser that would understand advanced commands from the player and music playing in the background through the PCjr sound hardware. The character would be able to move in front of or between objects on the screen, his graphics covering or being covered by these objects accordingly. The game was going to look and feel just like an animated cartoon that the player could control. A game like this had never been made before, and some people didn’t believe it was possible to turn Roberta's concept into a game.
In order to bring together all of the graphics, text, and logic code for Roberta’s new game, Sierra On-Line needed new programming tools. A complete adventure game development system, called AGI (short for Adventure Game Interpreter), was developed. All of the text, graphics, sound, and game logic would be designed to run through this interpreter. It would be easy to write other games for the same interpreter in the same way, and if Sierra On-Line wanted to port AGI games to other systems, they only needed an AGI interpreter for the new system that would run the games. Few changes to the game data were needed.
In the summer of 1984, King's Quest: Quest for the Crown was released. King’s Quest was a big hit on the IBM PCjr (nicknamed "peanut") and helped keep the company alive. Unfortunately, the PCjr itself was not well received. It was very incompatible with the standard IBM PC, and its “chiclet” keyboard wasn't working very well and couldn't be called user-friendly. The introduction of the PCjr was also overshadowed by the release of the Apple Macintosh at about the same time. The PCjr was doomed for failure, and it spelled a new disaster for Sierra On-Line.
But once again, a lucky coincidence saved the company, as the Tandy Corporation introduced the Tandy 1000 in 1985, just a few weeks after IBM finally stopped production of the PCjr. It was compatible with the PCjr (although not marketed as such because of its bad reputation), it was compatible with MS-DOS and it was a life-saver for Sierra On-Line since you could play King’s Quest on it. As lots of people started buying the Tandy 1000, that quickly became the leader of the home computer market, lots of people started buying King’s Quest: Quest for the Crown as well. Sierra On-Line started earning money again and was soon back on track.
The second half of the 80’s was a time of great growth and success for Sierra On-Line. The company that started at Ken and Roberta’s kitchen table just a few years back was growing steadily, but still managed to maintain the atmosphere of a ”family business”. It was a very stimulating environment to work in, as completely new ground was being broken and virtually everything was possible. Word of the success spread rapidly all over the country, and people came from far away places to Oakhurst and started working for the company. Many of them shared Ken's and Roberta's dream of a life close to nature and started new lives in the small but quickly growing mountain town. The customer support division in these early years was extremely friendly and helpful, and the customer base was loyal and quickly growing.
The company changed their logo to the more well-known design that they used for many years to come.
[edit] King's Quest II
In May 1985, Sierra On-Line released King's Quest II: Romancing the Throne, a highly anticipated sequel that was just as popular as its predecessor. It used the AGI system developed for King's Quest: Quest for the Crown and didn't bring much technical innovation to the series, but it was a bigger and better game in every other aspect. Just what the fans had asked for.
1985 was also the year when Sierra On-Line moved out of their rented offices to the Sierra Professional Building, a structure built specifically for the quickly growing company. The structure would eventually grow to a whole complex of buildings in the following ten years as the company expanded.
[edit] 1986
In 1986, Sierra On-Line teamed up with Disney and released three adventure games aimed at younger children, called Mickey's Space Adventure, The Black Cauldron and Winnie the Pooh in the Hundred Acre Wood.
[edit] Space Quest
While working hard on finishing The Black Cauldron, programmers Mark Crowe and Scott Murphy discovered that they had a mutual sense of humor and began to plan for an adventure game of their own. It was going to take place in outer space and it would be filled with crazy humor and an incredibly nerdy main character called Roger Wilco, a space janitor who fell asleep at work and ended up having to save the galaxy from an alien race known as the Sariens. They knew that Ken Williams wasn’t very interested in space themes, so they put together four sample rooms for Roger to walk around in using the AGI system in their spare time before they actually showed their ideas to Ken. Their simple demonstration impressed him enough to allow them to start working on the full game. It was named Space Quest: The Sarien Encounter. The game, released in October 1986, was an instant success and would get many sequels in the following years. The series has earned cult status today with a big community of fans all over the world. The Space Quest series is full of warped humor and classic adventure game moments.
[edit] King's Quest III
In the same month as Space Quest was released, Sierra On-Line and Roberta Williams also released King's Quest III: To Heir Is Human. It spanned five double-sided disks and was thus their second biggest game ever, beaten only by Time Zone in size. It was much bigger and much harder than the previous King's Quest games.
[edit] Trip to Japan, Thexder
1986 Ken Williams made his first business trip to Japan. His intentions with the trip were to set up methods of selling Sierra software there. He traveled there with the impression that he could teach the Japanese a thing or two about computer gaming and perhaps sell a few products to them. What he found there was a total surprise. The Japanese computer gaming industry was not at all behind the American. On the contrary, they were way ahead of them. Nintendo, a company few people in America had even heard about yet, had already sold their Famicom console to over 4 million Japanese homes, and games like Super Mario Brothers were well known in the whole country.
The games themselves were outstanding for the day, with stereo soundtracks and incredible graphics. Ken soon realized that it was the Japanese that could teach him, not vice versa. The trip ended up with one game bought instead of several sold. It was the action game Thexder that had captured Ken's interest. Ken arranged for Sierra to acquire the rights to port and publish the game in the U.S. from Game Arts, the Japanese publisher. Thexder was a phenomenal success when it reached the shelves just before Christmas 1986. It became Sierra's bestselling game in 1987 and cooperation with Japanese publishers continued throughout the late 80's.
[edit] Competition from Lucasfilm Games
This was also the year when Lucasfilm Games released their first adventure game, Maniac Mansion. It used an interpreter called SCUMM, similar in concept to AGI. They would later become the most serious competitor to Sierra On-Line in the adventure game genre. They didn't publish nearly as many adventure games as Sierra On-Line, but their games were always well done and most of them went on to become classics.
[edit] 1987
[edit] Leisure Suit Larry
Al Lowe, who had been working at Sierra On-Line for many years, most recently as lead programmer for King’s Quest III, was asked by Ken Williams to write a modern version of Chuck Benton's Softporn Adventure from 1981 by, the only pure text adventure that the company had ever released.
Al Lowe scrapped the original game material almost totally and came up with a main character called Larry Laffer, a nerdy loser in his 40s that lived together with his mom until just recently, when she finally threw him out of the house. With a receding hairline and a 70s leisure suit in white polyester, earning him the nickname Leisure Suit Larry, this anti-hero comes to the city of Lost Wages hoping to lose his virginity. The game had funny answers for almost every single thing the player could think of writing.
Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge Lizards was a great hit (although not instantly), and it even won the Software Publishers Association's "Best Adventure Game" award of 1987. A long series of Leisure Suit Larry games would follow in the coming years and become the second best selling game series of Sierra On-Line after King's Quest. Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge Lizards may have been the most pirated game of the late 80s. Sierra On-Line claims to have sold more hint books than copies of the game itself.
[edit] Police Quest
1987 also saw the start of yet another successful Sierra On-Line adventure game series. Produced by Jim Walls, ex-Officer of the California Highway Patrol, Police Quest: In Pursuit of the Death Angel put players in the shoes of Sonny Bonds, a veteran police officer who had to track down and capture a very dangerous drug dealer known as the Death Angel. Jim had no previous experience in computer game development. He met Ken Williams during a leave from service after getting involved in a shootout. Ken asked him if he wanted to use his experiences as a police officer to write an adventure game for Sierra On-Line. He accepted, happy to do something else after his traumatic incident. The result was a great success. It has been told that Police Quest: In Pursuit of the Death Angel was even used to some extent in the training of actual California police officers!
[edit] Mixed up Mother Goose
Roberta, resisting the pressure from the company and the fans to make a King’s Quest IV right after King’s Quest III, decided this year to write an educational game aimed specifically at younger kids. The result, Mixed-Up Mother Goose, received great acclaim from the industry.
[edit] 1988
[edit] Manhunter: New York
In 1988, Dave, Barry and DeeDee Murry designed an original adventure game called Manhunter: New York. Using location pictures of famous city landmarks for realism, they set the story in a dark future where alien eyeballs had invaded the earth, turning humans into slaves. The player starts out safely as a spy for the aliens, but has the option to risk everything and turn against them when the time is ready. Manhunter: New York was the first adventure game that was not parser-based, but used an interface similar to the later point-and-click adventures.
[edit] SCI
1988 would be the last year when Sierra On-Line used only the AGI system in their adventure games. In order to keep up with the technological evolution of computers and computer games, they developed a new interpreter called SCI. Although still pretty similar to AGI in many ways, it had lots of improvements.
First of all, the graphic capabilities were now improved, as standard 320×200 EGA graphics was introduced. It doubled the resolution of the old AGI system, enabling much more detailed graphics. The old vector graphic techniques for background pictures used to save disk/memory space in the AGI games was brought along to the new interpreter, but now offered some improvements as well.
The AGI system used dithering of pixels to approximate the original 160×200 16-color graphics when it ran on a computer capable only of showing 320×200 4-color CGA graphics. Now this idea was brought along to the 320×200 16-color EGA-supporting SCI, allowing game artists to mix all 16 colors with each other in patterns to create even better looking graphics.
The SCI system also introduced mouse support, though both keyboard and joystick control were still supported as well. An improved menu system enhanced the look and feel of a game, and whenever the user pressed a character key, a command window automatically popped up, freezing the game until the user had finished the command, unlike the AGI system that always displayed a command prompt at the bottom of the screen and never froze up the game when you typed in a command. So now the user could write commands without hurry even when the character on screen was in immediate danger, a very convenient feature. The SCI system also showed the current score and the name of the game at the top of the screen at all times.
The SCI system furthermore improved scripting technology by supporting object-oriented scripting code. Similar to C++ or JAVA programming, game programmers could now write script classes for basic handling of things like moving creatures in the game and then re-use that code, adding/modifying only the parts separating different creatures.
But the most revolutionary thing about SCI was that it introduced support for extended sound hardware on the PC. Other popular computer platforms such as the Atari and the Amiga already had good sound, but the PC still only had the dreaded single-voice PC Speaker that wasn't really intended for music at all, although bravely used by Sierra On-Line and other computer game developers nonetheless. When the first professional sound devices compatible with the PC hardware, such as the AdLib and the Roland MT-32, were introduced, very few people believed in them. But Ken Williams foresaw what others had not realized: This technology would become big one day! He worked hard to make sure that the company would promote these cards and make people buy them.
All in all, over $400,000 was spent on developing the technical improvements in SCI.
[edit] King's Quest IV
In September of 1988, the first SCI game was released: King's Quest IV: The Perils of Rosella. It made full use of the superior SCI system. For the first time ever, people with the right hardware could hear real soundcard music in a game on their PCs. It was a stunning experience that, combined with Sierra's aggressive marketing efforts made people rush out to buy PC sound hardware, thus launching the soundcard boom that has made it a standard component in today's PCs In October 1988, the company took a major step by going public, thus becoming Sierra On-Line Inc. Allowing public shareholders to buy Sierra stock gave the company working capital to develop new products and technologies.
[edit] 1989
The SCI system was truly ahead of its time and became the base for almost every single adventure game produced by Sierra On-Line after 1988. It was used for development of both Police Quest II and Leisure Suit Larry II, and in early 1989 for Space Quest III.
Roberta took another pause from the King’s Quest series in 1989 to write The Colonel's Bequest: A Laura Bow Mystery, a game taking place in the 20s and with a story not completely unlike the one of Mystery House.
In 1989, yet another successful Sierra On-Line game series was born with the release of Quest for Glory I: So You Want to be a Hero, written by Lori Ann Cole. This was not entirely an adventure game, as role-playing elements was seamlessly woven into it as well. It was thus the first Adventure/RPG hybrid ever made. The game was originally called Hero’s Quest, but this resulted in copyright problems as people could confuse it with the well known Milton Bradley board game, so Sierra On-Line had to change the name.
Al Lowe also made the third episode of the Leisure Suit Larry series in 1989, a game that ended up in the back lot of Sierra On-Line itself.
The last game to be made in the AGI system was Manhunter 2: San Francisco in 1989. After that, Sierra solely used the superior SCI system for all their adventure games. The Manhunter series didn't become successful enough for more sequels to get done.
In the same year, Sierra’s sister-company Infocom, who only made old-style text adventure games but had improved them to near perfection, was shut down. People didn't buy enough text adventures anymore, as Sierra On-Line and others created more and more impressive-looking graphical adventure games. The golden era of text adventure gaming was over.
[edit] 1990
In 1990, Sierra introduced SCI version 1 (the previous version being called SCI 0) with King's Quest V: Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder. It had beautifully hand-painted background scenes, scanned in 256-colors, and scrapped the old text parser interface for a totally icon-based system where you could interact with the game solely using the mouse. Some old text-parser fans complained that this new system greatly reduced the challenge and fun in playing an adventure game, but at the same time it made adventure games more appealing to new players and the new system prevailed. King's Quest V was the first Sierra On-Line game ever to sell more than 500,000 copies and was the biggest selling game of all time for the next five years. It won several awards as well, such as the Best Adventure Game of the Year from both the Software Publishers Association and Computer Gaming World Magazine.
A new version of Mixed-Up Mother Goose was also released this year. After two years in development, it was released on CD-ROM and had digitized speech instead of text. It was the first true multimedia adventure game to be released on CD-ROM. Developing was not an easy process. The speed of CD-ROM drives at the time made it impossible to find speech data on the disk without a noticeable delay whenever a character in the game was going to say something. Synchronizing the lips of the characters to the sound was also impossible. Of course, few people had CD-ROM players at the time, but the ones who did got to experience something truly amazing. It won the Software Publishers Association's 1990 Best Early Education Award. Ken Williams was in fact one of the nominees for the Lifetime Achievement Award at the same ceremony, but he lost it to Steve Wozniak, the legendary co-founder of Apple Computer. "I can't imagine a better guy to lose to than Steve. He's always been one of my major inspirations in this business." said Ken. (A quote from Sierra News Magazine.)
In 1990, to celebrate the company’s tenth anniversary, it was decided that Sierra On-Line should make new, enhanced versions of the first games in their five most popular game franchises: King's Quest, Space Quest, Leisure Suit Larry, Police Quest and Quest for Glory, using the new SCI system. As Roberta Williams had begun work on the next King's Quest game, newly hired game designer Josh Mandel was assigned to the project of remaking the first King's Quest game. Roberta kept an eye on the project, but Josh still had pretty free hands in designing the game.
The releases of the SCI versions of Sierra's old classics in 1990-91 unfortunately proved a sales disaster. It turned out that old Sierra fans liked the originals much better, despite their outdated graphics and sound, and new players were not very impressed with the gameplay.
In 1990, after a deep discussion with friend and Microsoft head Bill Gates, Ken Williams decided to change Sierra’s corporate strategy: From now on, Sierra would be 1/3 Perennial Series (such as King’s Quest, Space Quest, etc.) 1/3 Educational titles and 1/3 Productivity software. In order to meet this goal, Sierra would have to begin purchasing other companies in order to create a more diverse product line.
[edit] Acquisition of Dynamix
Later that year, the still growing Sierra On-Line made their first big acquisition of another computer game company: Dynamix, founded by Jeff Tunnell and Damon Slye in 1984. Dynamix had hit upon hard times and was at the verge of bankruptcy at the time of acquisition yet Ken Williams saw the profitability possibilities of the company and in doing so saved it from closure. A number of successful adventure games, like Rise of the Dragon, Heart of China and The Adventures of Willy Beamish were released by the company in the following years. But they also designed very successful games in other genres, such as the award-winning flight simulator Red Baron, the 1993 hit RPG classic, Betrayal at Krondor, the Front Page Sports series and the innovative puzzle game The Incredible Machine.
[edit] The Sierra Network
In late 1990 Ken Williams decided to look at the possibilities of playing adventure games in multiplayer over a global network. He assigned Al Lowe, Jeff Stephenson (who did much of the programming on the AGI and SCI systems) and Matthew George to the project. Matthew would work on the low-level modem communication system, Jeff would write a multiplayer version of SCI and Al would program the high-level applications. He started to think up Leisure Suit Larry 4 as a multiplayer adventure game.
There were many problems to solve if this was going to work. They installed 32 new telephone lines in the building, bought a bunch of 2400 baud modems and connected them all together. The system proved difficult to implement, so Al wrote a simple checkers game to test its basic features. It worked, and he went on and made a backgammon and a chess game while Jeff and Matt continued working on the system, and by 1991 the project was up and running.
Due to the lack of technology at the time, the multiplayer game was ultimately dropped. (Because of this, Leisure Suit Larry 4, is nonexistant; the series continued with Leisure Suit Larry 5). The company decided to continue with a lower scale version of the multiplayer gaming using smaller, more simplistic games. Margaret Lowe, Al Lowe's wife, created the name in which it was refered to as Constant Companion. It was later renamed The Sierra Network or TSN. A monthly fee was implemented allowing users to connect to TSN to game multiplayer against one another. The TSN system is considered to be advanced for its time.
Modem restraints, lack of interest, and slow growth contributed to TSN's downfall. An estimated ten million dollars was being lost per year when TSN was sold to AT&T; TSN continued a downward spiral being sold to America On-Line, and then consequently, it was dropped
[edit] 1991
By 1991 the company had grown to employ over 300 employees and was only growing larger and stronger as time went on.
A CD-ROM version of King's Quest V was released in 1991. The voice acting was mostly made by Sierra employees. It was the second Sierra game to be released on a CD.
[edit] EcoQuest
1991 also saw the release of EcoQuest: The Search for Cetus, a very successful adventure game for kids. The game took place mostly underwater and blended facts with fiction in a successful and original edutainment adventure, which encouraged kids to become aware of ecological issues and environmental hazards. Shipped together with the game was also a book entitled I helped Save the Earth: 55 Fun Ways Kids Can Make a Difference and a part of the proceeds from the sale of each copy of the game was donated to The Marine Mammal Center in California. The game was also sold with the stamp Games to Get Young Minds Moving on it. The other games in the series were Mixed-Up Mother Goose CD, Lori Ann Cole's Mixed-Up Fairy Tales, Corey Cole's Castle of Dr. Brain and Jones in the Fast Lane.
[edit] Brøderbund
In March 1991, there was much discussion of a would-be merger between Sierra and Brøderbund Software. Brøderbund was a major competitor of Sierra and an influential player in the computer entertainment industry. Brøderbund had over 200 employees that specialized in making mostly educational software. The merger would make the combined company the largest and most powerful independent software developer and publisher in the world. The truth behind the merger was that Sierra was acquiring Brøderbund, but after the acquisition, the Brøderbund would exist as a subsidiary with its own publishing unit, and the combined company would be named Sierra-Broderbund.
Sierra and Brøderbund signed a letter of intent to merge but that agreement was terminated in April 1991 when Sierra and Broderbund came to a disagreement upon what the structure and management of the combined company would be after the merger.
Brøderbund would go on to publish Myst in 1993, which would end up becoming the highest selling computer game of all time, a title which it would hold for eleven years.
[edit] 1992
In February 1992, Ken Williams met with John Carmack and John Romero, the founders and heads of id Software and offered to buy id Software for $2.5 million Unfortunately, the two developers turned Ken down, and id Software went on to release Wolfenstein 3D and later Doom and Quake, games that defined and brought first person shooter gaming to the mainstream market, a genre that continues to be popular to this day and led to the decline in popularity of Adventure Games starting in 1996.
[edit] King's Quest VI
Later in the year, Sierra On-Line acquired Bright Star Technologies, a multimedia technology company famous for their Lip-synching technology. This technology was used in King's Quest VI: Heir Today, Gone Tomorrow, the biggest project Sierra had ever undertaken. Roberta Williams had felt that all of her best stories had been used up and was considering handing King’s Quest to a new designer, but she simply couldn’t walk away. This time, she shared her duties with another designer, Jane Jensen. Jensen co-designed and co-wrote the game with Roberta and she then worked on the dialogue and narration by herself and also wrote the Guidebook to the Land of the Green Isles manual for the game. King’s Quest VI featured professional voice acting, motion-captured animation, a multi-threaded storyline which featured many possible endings to the game and an impressive 3D-animated introduction sequence. A second release of the game in 1993 featured high resolution dialogue portraits, and a redesign of the control panel and text boxes.
[edit] Gabriel Knight
Right after finishing King's Quest VI, Jane Jensen started production on the first game in her own series. Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Fathers was produced as a CD game right from the beginning, with an all-star voice acting cast, including Hollywood actors Tim Curry, Mark Hamill, Leah Remini and Michael Dorn. The game received much critical acclaim and won several awards. The success helped launching Jane's career as a novelist and she soon wrote a paperback novelization of the game.
[edit] 1993
[edit] Acquisition of Coktel Vision
1993 saw the acquisition by Sierra of Coktel Vision, a Paris-based software developer that provided the company with games such as the Inca and Gobliiins series, and was a valuable asset in international development and distribution. The acquisition was also beneficial to Coktel in that it introduced the company’s games to a much larger market.
[edit] Police Quest IV
The Police Quest series left the adventure genre with the fourth installment in the series. Police Quest IV: Open Season, designed by Daryl F. Gates, former Chief of Police at the Los Angeles Police Department, (Jim Walls left the series after making the third Police Quest game) was a simulator of tactical police procedures during crisis situations when the elite forces has to be called in. The action/strategy/simulation gameplay mix was a success and would spawn more sequels, although the Police Quest name was dropped from all subsequent titles.
[edit] Move to Bellevue, Washington
Sierra had grown enormously since its first years and put Oakhurst, California on the map. The Oakhurst facility constantly grew and new buildings were needed to hold recording studios, warehouses and other things needed to continue making games of the highest quality using the latest technology. The company had grown to become the single biggest employer in town. With over 500 miles to the closest university, finding people to hire was becoming a major problem. Without an airport available nearby, Ken Williams found most of his time being spent traveling between Oakhurst and different business meetings at other places. Microsoft founder Bill Gates had previously asked Ken how he could run such a successful business from such a remote place, and it was now apparent that it wasn't possible to keep doing that and still grow. It was time to move the headquarters.
The decision was made to move north, to Bellevue, Washington. The Seattle area was much better suited to run the company from and with companies such as Microsoft based nearby, finding people to hire wasn't a problem. With management and some of the development teams moved to Seattle, the company could continue growing and still keep developing games in Oakhurst.
The company was now made out of five separate, and largely autonomous development divisions: Sierra Publishing (Oakhurst), Sierra Northwest (Bellevue), Dynamix, Bright Star Technologies and Coktel Vision, with each group working separately on product development but sharing manufacturing, distribution and sales resources, overseen by the management of Sierra and the main Sierra organization (Sierra Northwest). This strategy created a large and diverse but well managed company with various brands that brought the whole company more success and Sierra only continued to grow as time went on.
[edit] 1994
With the move of the Sierra headquarters to Bellevue, the company was again free to grow and prosper. In 1994, the improvements in PC technology had reached the point where multimedia applications on CD-ROM with digital sound and music were becoming the standard, and rumors of Windows 95, the operating system that would change the whole interactive entertainment industry, were starting to spread. In order to keep at the bleeding edge of technology, new kinds of games were necessary. The development cost of computer games was quickly growing with all the extra work it took to make better and better graphics and sound. Celebrating 15 years in the business, Sierra re-released all of their most popular game franchises in special anniversary collections with all the games up to that time on CD-ROM. They also changed the design of their logo to a slightly different look this year.
1994 saw the sale of the ImagiNation Network to AT&T Corp due to its low profitability and high cost. However, in an agreement signed as part of the sale, Sierra would still retain exclusive rights to develop games for it.
[edit] Two projects
After finishing King's Quest VI, Roberta Williams embarked on not only one, but two new projects, and they were her most ambitious ones ever. On one hand, she created King's Quest VII: The Princeless Bride, together with co-designer Lorelei Shannon. On the other hand she developed the horror-adventure Phantasmagoria, which was released in 1995. The games were extremely different from each other, and they both used new techniques.
[edit] King's Quest VII
King's Quest VII was made in a new version of the SCI interpreter, called SCI 32. Programmed in a 32-bit environment it was more multimedia- and Windows-friendly than the previous versions of the interpreter. King's Quest VII was truly a Lorelei Shannon effort. Shannon held the dominant directing and design credits for the game and Roberta had no part in writing King's Quest VII. She also is credited as Voice Director for the game. The game was presented in double the resolution of King's Quest VI and used cel animation, just like a traditional animated movie. It took four animation houses to complete the graphics for the game and it was released directly on CD-ROM. The game was very light-hearted and Disney-like in its design, making it a fun game for children to play.
[edit] 1995
1995 would prove to be an extremely successful and busy year for the company. The move to Bellevue brought great financial success to the company, and in 1995 focus was turned to new areas of home entertainment. A number of investments and acquisitions were made in 1995 in the home productivity area. In May, Sierra acquired The Pixellite Group and with this acquisition came the rights to produce and distribute Print Artist, a desktop publishing program enabling the user to print high-quality documents at home. Green Thumb Software, a company creating gardening and landscape products, was also acquired by Sierra as well as Arion Software, producer of the MasterCook culinary series, acquired in September. A joint venture with P.F. Collier to jointly develop and publish a multimedia general reference encyclopedia was also made in November of 1995.
1995 was a great financial year for the company. With $83.4 million in sales from its software-publishing business, earnings were improved by 19 percent, bringing a net income of $11.9 million to the company. This caused the stock price to jump from the 1994 value of $18 to $26.
Michael Brochu, a longtime executive and advisor at Sierra was named the company President and COO by CEO and Chairman Ken Williams. Brochu was responsible for the day-to-day management of the company while Williams would focus on product development.
[edit] Acquisitions and joint ventures
But investments were also made in the gaming area. Sierra On-Line purchased the strategy games publisher Impressions Games, creators of games like the Caesar series and Lords of the Realm. Papyrus Design Group, designers of acclaimed racing simulations such as the NASCAR and IndyCar Racing series, and flight simulation software developer SubLogic, designers of Pro Pilot, were also purchased by Sierra On-Line in 1995.
In February 1995, Sierra and Nintendo of America Inc. signed an agreement in which Sierra would produce titles for the then upcoming Nintendo 64 console entertainment system. No titles, however, were produced due to Nintendo’s legal troubles but the advertisement of the move brought Sierra many new fans in console gaming.
In June 1995, Sierra and Pioneer Electric Corp. signed an agreement to create a joint venture which would develop, publish, manufacture and market entertainment software for the lucrative Japanese software market. This joint venture created a new company called Sierra Venture. With Sierra and Pioneer investing over $12 million, Sierra Pioneer immediately manufactured and shipped over twenty of Sierra’s most popular products to Japan and over the next few years Sierra Pioneer would create new entertainment and educational titles for the Japanese market, which would give Sierra a base of operations in the Asian market.
[edit] SierraWeb
August 1995 saw the debut of SierraWeb, Sierra’s first website. SierraWeb offered an interactive experience in which viewers could redesign the website to their own tastes by choosing a number of background designs and control palettes. Each part of the website had different themes. For example, Phantasmagoria's page would be a spooky, horror themed page. Other features included news, video and corporate information and online sales along with technical support for all of Sierra’s games. SierraWeb was also the first website to utilize chat rooms.
[edit] Games of 1995
[edit] Phantasmagoria
Phantasmagoria featured live actors captured in Full Motion Video. The project was much bigger than anything Sierra had previously undertaken. The development cost of this game reached the levels of Hollywood movies. A brand new video studio, featuring a 16×16 meter blue screen, the latest in digital recording equipment and the best Silicon Graphics computers available at the time, was built for the game and over 20 professional actors were hired.
This project had been in Roberta's mind for several years and was something dramatically different from the family-friendly King's Quest series. This was a gruesome horror story in the spirit of Edgar Allan Poe and Stephen King and would be very unsuitable for children.
At the time of its release in late 1995 the anticipation of the game was extremely high. However, the game turned out to be a big disappointment to a lot of people, and computer game reviewers complained about bad acting, boring video sequences and a gameplay that was much too easy and linear. Nevertheless almost a million copies were sold when the game was first released in August 1995, making it the best-selling Sierra adventure game ever.
[edit] The Beast Within
More successful in getting FMV and good gameplay working together was Jane Jensen with The Beast Within, the second game in th Gabriel Knight series. The game, shipped on 6 CDs, took place in Bavaria, Germany and featured two parallel stories: one where Gabriel Knight, the hero from Jane's previous game, as a Schattenjäger has to solve the mystery of a series of suspected werewolf killings. The other storyline featured his assistant Grace Nakimura, as she went on a historical journey and solved the mystery of Mad King Ludwig II and the legend of a lost Wagner opera. The game recieved the 1996 Game of the Year award from Computer Gaming World.
[edit] Torin's Passage
A more traditional game, Torin's Passage, was also released in 1995. Developed by Al Lowe at the main Sierra studios in Bellevue, this family oriented adventure game was in great contrast to his trademark adult themed comedy ventures. It was conceived in late 1994 after Lowe was inspired to create a game which both he and his young daughter could relate to and enjoy. It was developed under the new SCI 2 engine and used cel animation like King's Quest VII, with an atmosphere similar to contemporary Disney films and featured a very innovative hint system. It was designed to be the first in an epic series similar to King's Quest, but the declining popularity of adventures post 1996 would put an end to these plans.
[edit] Other 1995 games
- The Bizarre Adventures of Woodruff and the Schnibble, a wacky adventure game developed by Coktel Vision which featured multiple screen horizontal and vertical scrolling, fluid animations and full digital sound and voice support.
- A remake of Thexder, Sierra’s first Windows 95 title. It was a big seller upon its release in August 1995.
- Sierra published Conquest A.D. 1086, a medieval adventure/strategy game in November 1995. Developed by Software Sorcery. Conquest featured detailed 3D graphics and a complex strategy system.
- King’s Quest VII was also re-released that year in a Windows 95 compatible version which included a unique book-marking save game system and other new features.
[edit] 1996
The beginning of 1996 also saw another jump in the stock price to $32 and with 1,100 employees spread throughout the United States and overseas and approximately 100 products in development at any given time, Sierra was growing faster than ever.
Working with TSR, Inc., Sierra was granted the license to create computer games based on TSR’s popular Dungeons & Dragons role-playing system. Sierra entrusted its new subsidiary Synergistic Software to create Birthright - The Gorgon's Alliance based on the Birthright campaign setting.
In June 1996, Sierra introduced a new product line, SierraOriginals, through Bellevue, which would re-release the original versions of many of Sierra’s hit titles such as King's Quest VI, Gabriel Knight and Red Baron at value prices.
In October 1996, Sierra introduced a new creative group called k.a.a. Based out of Dynamix’s studios in Oregon; k.a.a. would specialize in the popular side-scrolling gritty 3rd person action genre and would be run by Dynamix's Jeff Tunnell. The studio produced two titles, Hunter Hunted and Cybergladiators. Both games were minor hits, and there were plans for k.a.a. to produce eight more action titles by 1998, but these plans were eventually scrapped and the group was disbanded in 1997.
December 1996 saw the release of The Realm Online, a massively multiplayer online game similar to Neverwinter Nights. It had over 25,000 users at its peak. Ken Williams acted as Executive Producer on the Realm from its release until late 1998.
[edit] Sold to CUC
In 1996, CUC International, a huge membership-based consumer services conglomerate with travel, shopping, auto, dining, home improvement and financial services offered to more than 60 million customers worldwide, aggressively sought to expand into interactive entertainment and in February 1996 offered to buy Sierra at a roughly 90% higher price than it was trading, a price of approximately $1.5 billion. Walter Forbes, a member of Sierra’s board of directors, and the CEO of CUC, had initially suggested the sale to Ken Williams.
With such an offer, the decision was in the hands of the shareholders and not the management, and the company was sold to CUC on July 24th, 1996 along with leading educational software developer and publisher Davidson & Associates Inc. Other interactive entertainment companies to be acquired within the year were Gryphon Software and Knowledge Adventure Inc.
The transfer of control to CUC was a matter of much discussion as they had no previous experience in the interactive entertainment business. At the time though, Sierra thought that by consolidation with their new sister-companies they would be able to grow even faster than before.
Things unfortunately took a turn for the worse when CUC decided to transfer the control of the company’s product development divisions to Bob Davidson, the CEO of Davidson & Associates and shut down a number of groups within Sierra. Ken Williams saw the transfer of control of product development to Davidson as a bad move; while Davidson had been very successful in managing his company and it’s subsidiary companies, Ken felt that this move would be a disaster and soon came head to head with Davidson and CUC on this issue, and also on the structuring of Sierra after the sale. An agreement was reached, and Williams managed to retain control of product development and administration for a time while Davidson was given control of Sierra’s manufacturing, distribution and sales divisions. However, Davidson had begun having disagreements with CUC and also with Ken Williams.
Williams left his day-to-day duties at Sierra for a time to work on NetMarket, CUC’s online sales project. While he remained CEO of the company, day-to-day duties were handed to Scott Lynch, Randy Dersham and Bill Moore, all longtime Sierra executives. Each would control a third of the company. Meanwhile, during the tumult of the CUC sale, Sierra made another acquisition of a smaller firm in 1996 called Synergistic Software, famous for being one of the earliest third party developers for the Apple II computer, and also famous for their line of fantasy and sports entertainment software. The sports area was further expanded upon in April 1996 by the acquisition of Headgate, a developer of golf products.
For the first few months after the acquisition, Sierra existed as a largely autonomous and separate division with its own distribution, marketing, sales and manufacturing networks. In September 1996, CUC announced plans to consolidate some of the functions of it’s game companies into a single company called CUC Software Inc, operated out of Davidson & Associate’s headquarters in Torrance, California (Davidson became a publisher for it’s studios and Knowledge Adventure’s products; Blizzard became an entirely separate CUC Software division.) CUC Software would consolidate the manufacturing, distribution and sales resources of all of its divisions which by mid 1997 included Sierra, Davidson, Blizzard, Knowledge Adventure and Gryphon Software. CUC Software was initially headed by Bob Davidson. Davidson acted as the CEO of CUC Software.
[edit] 1997
On January 21st, 1997, CUC announced changes in CUC Software’s senior management. Bob Davidson stepped down as CEO of CUC Software, and his wife Janice Davidson stepped down as President of Davidson & Associates. Bob Davidson would remain a vice chairman and member of the board of directors of CUC International Inc. and Jan Davidson would remain as an educational software advisor to Davidson & Associates and would ease the transition. Christopher McLeod was announced as the new CEO of CUC Software, directly overseeing the management of Sierra and Blizzard Entertainment and would act as the COO of Davidson & Associates. Michael Brochu, Sierra’s president and Ken Williams, and Allen Adham Blizzard’s President, would report directly to McLeod.
On April 3, 1997, Sierra announced that the staff of the old company headquarters in Oakhurst would be reduced by almost 50%, relocating about 90 people to CUC Software’s headquarters in Torrance. Most of the people relocated were in Sierra’s “operations” departments which included disk duplication and manufacturing. As CUC Software was established, consolidation was needed to bring focus to the new company and also to create a stabile and solid platform for its subsidiaries such as Sierra. The relocations at the Oakhurst facilities were part of this consolidation.
Ken Williams resigned as Sierra’s CEO in late 1997, but would remain as an advisor to the company until December 1998. After leaving the post as Sierra CEO, Williams soon embarked on a new project. In November 1997, together with former Sierra Executive Vice President of Product Development Jerry Bowerman, he founded WorldStream Communications, an Internet-based company developing online communications software.
[edit] Cendant Corporation
Later that month, CUC decided to merge with HFS Incorporated, a leading franchiser of brand name hotels, residential real estate and car operations. In December of the same year the merger was completed and the two companies jointly formed the Cendant Corporation with more than 40,000 employees and operations in over 100 countries. While still remaining one of the most important interactive entertainment companies in the world, Sierra now had to get used to being only a part of Cendant Software, one of the many divisions within Cendant.
With over 2,000 employees around the globe, Cendant Software consolidated the sales, R&D, distribution, finance, accounting and management of Sierra, Davidson, Blizzard and Knowledge Adventure. Operated out of Torrance, California, Cendant Software was headed by Chris McLeod with Sierra’s, Blizzard’s, Davidson’s and Knowledge Adventure’s CEOs acting as subordinates. Ken Williams oversaw this as as a Vice President of CUC. Sierra also began to change character into more of a publisher than a developer of games. This was just one example of a trend in the business, where most of the big computer game companies of old went in the same direction, as this was a time Sierra was growing at its fastest.
[edit] Hellfire
Sierra was given the license to develop an expansion pack to Blizzard Entertainment's role-playing game Diablo named Hellfire. Blizzard was busy with developing an ultimately cancelled game entitled Warcraft Adventures and didn't have the time or resources to develop the hotly awaited expansion. Sierra handed development duties to its subsidiary Synergistic Studios. Released in November 1997, the game flopped due to a lack of marketing, and Sierra and Blizzard never worked together again.
[edit] Acquisitions
- Berkeley Systems, publisher of the You Don't Know Jack series and the After Dark screensaver series (April).
- Books That Work, another home productivity software company creating software for design, 3D visualization and creation of home-related projects such as gardens, kitchens etc. (April)
- PyroTechnix, another game developer (December).
[edit] 1998
In 1998, Sierra split up its organization into five sub-brands and corporate divisions:
- Sierra Attractions, responsible for the casual gaming area, with titles such as the Hoyle, You Don't Know Jack and 3-D Ultra series. This division included Berkeley Systems, and the offices at Bellevue and Oakhurst.
- Sierra Home, the home improvement software publisher responsible for the Print Artist, Hallmark Card Studios, MasterCook series etc. This group included Books that Work and the teams of Arion Software, Green Thumb Software and others.
- Sierra Sports, Publisher of sports entertainment software, and included Papyrus racing games, Front Page Sports games and Dynamix's sports titles.
- Sierra Studios, Run by Scott Lynch. The developer and publisher of the big games, with groups at the home offices in Bellevue (Sierra Northwest) and development groups at Impressions Software and PyroTechnix. It would also be the publisher of independent developers including Valve and Relic Entertainment.
- Dynamix, a Sierra Company was simply the old Dynamix, developing games like the 3D combat simulation Starsiege and the Red Baron and Pro Pilot flight simulators.
A new company logotype, for the first time without the Half Dome silhouette in it, was used for the company and all of its sub-brands.
In May 1998, Sierra Publishing, the Sierra division still working at the original company headquarters in Oakhurst, changed its name to Yosemite Entertainment. While now only one of many parts within Sierra, this core group of well over 100 employees were in most cases the very same people that had been responsible for Sierra's huge success throughout the 80's and early 90's. Sierra FX, a sixth sub-brand, was formed for this development studio to release their games under.
In June 12, 1998, Sierra announced the appointment of David Grenewetzki as their new president and CEO. Grenewetzki had a solid experience in computer software company management from previous appointments at many companies, including Palladium Interactive Inc. and Accolade Inc. and promised to work hard to make sure that the company would be able to meet the future challenges of new platforms, product categories and technologies.
In March of 1998, Cendant had reported a 1997 net income of $55.4 million in March of 1998. However, the real 1997 result was a net loss of $217.2 million. As irregularities in the books of Cendant were discovered in early 1998, an audit committee set up by Cendant's Board of Directors launched an investigation and discovered that the former management team of CUC, including its top executives Walter Forbes and Kirk Shelton, had been fraudulently preparing false business statements for several years so the company could meet the earning expectations of Wall Street analysts. It was made clear that HFS had not played any part in this fraud scandal.
The irregularities were in the area of several hundred million dollars and when the news was announced and the real numbers revealed in the end of September, the Cendant stock instantly plummeted to about one fourth of its former value. As a result, the company was sued by its shareholders and the former CUC management team was terminated.
In March 2001, Forbes and Shelton were indicted by a federal grand jury and sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission, accused of directing the massive accounting fraud that ultimately cost the company and investors billions of dollars. Sierra and Davidson were among the many Cendant subsidiaries that had been used in the irregular bookings and Cendant had already announced its intention to sell off its entire computer entertainment division when the news of the accounting fraud came. Sierra was one of many companies that suffered great losses because of this affair even though it had been totally out of the management’s hands. Many of it’s employees lost their pensions, their net worth and even their jobs. The following years would be filled with aggressive endeavors to restore the profitability of the company.
On June 3, 1998, WorldStream Communications announced the launch of TalkSpot, an online radio station featuring well-known talk show hosts and a wide range of quality programs on three live channels. One covered daily news and current events, one was for general issues affecting people's lives and one was for sports only. Offered as a free consumer service, TalkSpot radio could do much more than traditional radio by offering live chat, streaming pictures and many other things to the listeners on its website. During the last few years, traditional adventure games had gone from one of the main genres to a relatively unprofitable business. Production costs were high and the sales couldn't match the ones of First Person Shooters and the increasingly popular RPGs. This caused fewer and fewer adventure games to be produced by Sierra. In 1998, Yosemite Entertainment released Quest for Glory V: Dragon Fire as the conclusion of the series, not planning any more sequels. The game was originally intended to feature an Internet multiplayer feature, but time limitations forced the game to be released without it. Sierra promised that a multiplayer edition of the game was to be released later.
After finishing Phantasmagoria, Roberta Williams, together with Mark Seibert, had worked on the next installment in the King's Quest series. The rising popularity of 3D graphics and action games resulted in a game design dramatically different than anything seen before in a King's Quest game. Taking place in a true 3D environment, King's Quest: Mask of Eternity featured action and RPG elements mixed with traditional adventure puzzles. The game took four years to complete, much longer than any previous game in the series and went through many changes during it’s long development. It was aimed at the average gamer rather than the die-hard adventure fan. Although many old fans of the series were disappointed by this approach, the strategy proved successful and the sales of the game were great when released for Christmas 1998. However, the success of the game still couldn't change the common opinion that adventure games was a dead genre and the new game design didn't revolutionize the genre as Roberta was hoping it would do.
On November 20, 1998, Cendant announced the sale of its entire consumer software division to Paris-based Havas S.A., France's largest media company. Havas, in turn, was a newly acquired business unit of Vivendi S.A., a huge water utility conglomerate with more than 220.000 employees, expanding into the media and telecommunications business. With this sale, Sierra became a part of Havas Interactive, the interactive entertainment division of the company.
[edit] 1999
After the Cendant scandal, the purchase by Havas S.A. (a division of Vivendi S.A.) was seen as a lucky turn for the company. The sale was completed in January 12, 1999. In addition to the $800 million paid by Havas, Cendant received a $185 million bonus in cash payments for showing good 1998 results. The acquisition was Vivendi's first major media purchase in the U.S. Initially, the sale didn't result in any major changes at Sierra, but they were soon about to come...
[edit] “Black Monday”
The many acquisitions made by Sierra over the last few years had resulted in an organization that was very hard to run for the management team. With over 10 development studios and more than 1,000 employees spread out all over the country and overseas, company CEO David Grenewetzki and other Sierra officials decided it was time to tighten their belts. Therefore, on February 22, 1999, they publicly announced a major reorganization of the company, resulting in the shutdown of several of their development studios, cutbacks on others and the relocation of key projects and employees from these studios to Bellevue. This decision was made by Sierra's own management, not by Havas. Studios that were shut down included PyroTechnix, Books That Work Inc. and Synergistic Software. Headgate was sold back to its original owner and the publishing of Sierra's InterAction Magazine was discontinued. About 250 people in total lost their jobs.
But the shutdown that definitely received the most attention was that of Yosemite Entertainment. With the exception of the warehouse and distribution department, the entire studio was shut down. This decision was unexpected and highly controversial, as this was the original Sierra headquarters and the birthplace of all the classic games that had made it such a successful company. Many of the people behind these games still worked there and were now informed that they had lost their jobs. About 135 people at Yosemite were fired. Yosemite Entertainment was in the middle of developing the highly awaited space combat simulator Babylon 5, the Lord of the Rings-based online multiplayer roleplaying game Middle Earth, the tactical simulation game Navy SEALs and a multiplayer add-on to Quest for Glory V.
A disturbing aspect of this shutdown was the way the employees were notified of the shutdown. Going to work thinking it would just be a normal Monday, they were soon called to a meeting where they were informed that they had been sacked, and this was only about 15 minutes before the news were officially announced to the press, a cause of action totally against common practice and that upset many people. 40 people, critical to the development of Babylon 5 and Middle Earth (the other projects were dropped) were offered to relocate to the company headquarters in Bellevue and continue with the development, but with the feelings towards the company at the time, few of them accepted right away.
Eventually about 30 people moved from Oakhurst to Seattle. Needless to say, the shutdown of Yosemite Entertainment was a major blow to the small mountain community, and emergency actions were taken to help all the people finding new jobs. Former Sierra employee William Shockley created a discussion forum for former Sierra employees at www.roboto.com and Ken Williams sent them all a letter, telling them how sad he and Roberta felt for them and what had come of the company they founded.
But the bad news didn't even end there. At the same time, legendary game designers Al Lowe and Scott Murphy were fired. Al had just started work on Leisure Suit Larry 8, planned to feature 3D-animated characters. Scott Murphy was involved in a Space Quest 7 project that originally looked very promising, but that had later started facing serious problems when Sierra's management wanted it to be a multiplayer adventure game, a design that had been unsuccessfully attempted before with Leisure Suit Larry 4 and was doomed to fail this time as well. This was a result of the common opinion that adventure games were a dead and unprofitable genre at the time, and by firing two of the most well-known game designers in the industry, Sierra made it perfectly clear that they weren't interested in any more Leisure Suit Larry or Space Quest adventure games, at least not as long as they were less profitable than other genres.
The closing of Yosemite Entertainment and all the other changes at Sierra left a lot of people upset and angry at their new management and business strategy. The date February 22, 1999 soon became known as "Black Monday" (or "Chainsaw Monday" as Scott Murphy named it) and the sad events gathered a huge Internet community of Sierra fans from all over the world, sharing their feelings and thoughts about the reorganization with each other. To many fans and former employees, Black Monday marked the death of the Sierra of old.
Layoffs continued on March 1, when Sierra fired 30 employees at the previously unaffected Dynamix, 15% of their entire workforce.
On March 6, Ken Williams, together with his wife Roberta and game designers Al Lowe and Scott Murphy appeared on Ken's online radio station TalkSpot in a nearly two hour live show called The Sierra Reunion, a real treat for all Sierra fans. During the show they shared their thoughts about the past, present and future of Sierra. A lot of people called in to the show, including a significant number of famous old-time Sierra employees.
In June 1999, Ken Williams shut down TalkSpot and laid off its employees. He did this because venture capitalist Rich Shapero of Crosspoint Venture Partners had convinced him that shutting down TalkSpot and instead focusing on providing the technology behind it to other companies would be a more profitable affair. Early in December the same year, WorldStream unveiled its new technology, designed to broadcast things such as teleconferences, concerts, product presentations and sales events. They offered a program called eComm1, a national network of servers and a mobile Plug-and-Play broadcast setup called Studio in a Box to the customers.
[edit] Games
Sierra continued to publish games for smaller development houses with great success. In September 1999, they released Homeworld, a real-time space combat strategy game in full 3D, developed by Relic Entertainment. The game design was revolutionary for the genre and the game received great critical acclaim and many awards.
If King's Quest: Mask of Eternity hadn't revolutionize its genre, a game that did was Half-Life. Eventually released in 1999, two years after Sierra and Valve’s agreement, Half-Life was a new kind of first-person shooter, where a totally continuous gameplay featuring scripted plot sequences in a 3D environment of previously unseen quality told the story of an accident in a top-secret government research facility resulting in hordes of both aliens and government soldiers turned against you, as you would try to escape from the facility and put an end to the killing of your fellow employees. The game not only received great reviews and over 50 Game of the Year awards, but also had sensational sales and spawned a huge community of online players and modifiers of the game engine.
A bittersweet moment for adventure game fans was the release of Gabriel Knight 3: Blood of the Sacred, Blood of the Damned, on November 3, 1999; Happy, because this was a long-awaited game that was embraced by both fans of the series and game critics and reviewers; Sad, because Sierra also announced that this was going to be their last adventure game for now. With their new business strategy, it would probably have been canceled too, if it had not been in production for such a long while and if not so much money had been spent on the development already. The only thing that would make Sierra return to making adventure games would be a change in popularity for the genre.
Fortunately, things changed for the better in Oakhurst when UK-based games developer and publisher Codemasters, in an effort to establish themselves in the United States, announced that they would launch a new development studio in Oakhurst, using the old Sierra facilities and many of the old Yosemite Entertainment staff in mid-September 1999. In early October they announced that they would take over management and maintenance of the online RPG The Realm and that they would pick up and complete the previously canceled Navy SEALs. They also reported that they had obtained the rights to continue using the name Yosemite Entertainment for the development house.
[edit] Reorganization
Meanwhile, Sierra announced another reorganization, this time into three business units: Core Games, led by Mark Hood and Jim Veevaert, Casual Entertainment, led by Steve Van Horn and Barbara Schwabe, and Home Productivity, led by Dianna Amorde and Anne Boswell. Basically, Core Games replaced Sierra Studios and Sierra Sports, Casual Entertainment took over the Sierra Attractions unit and Home Productivity replaced the old Sierra Home.
This reorganization resulted in even more layoffs, eliminating 105 additional jobs and a number of games in production, including Desert Fighter and Pro Pilot Paradise from Dynamix, Babylon 5, the much awaited game started at Yosemite Entertainment and Orcs: Revenge, a Berkeley Systems title. This was announced on September 21.
Ironically, this reorganization caused all of the former Oakhurst employees who had opted to relocate to Seattle and continued working for Sierra to be laid off, when both the Babylon 5 and Middle Earth projects were shut down. Fortunately for these people, they had negotiated for good severance packages in case this would happen.
These final cuts eliminated most of Sierra’s prominent development teams and projects, and so 1999 proved to be the last year that Sierra developed any of its major titles in-house. After 1999, Sierra almost entirely ceased to be a developer of games, and as time went on, instead became a publisher games for independent developers.
Sierra’s big games, such as the SWAT series, would be developed by third party companies, while releases of lesser importance, such as the Tribes, The Incredible Machine and NASCAR Racing series would be handled in house at Bellevue and by Sierra’s studios at Impressions, Papyrus and Dynamix. Titles such as Print Artist, Hallmark Cards, and Hoyle would also be handled through Bellevue under Sierra’s Home Productivity brand.
[edit] 2000
On June 2, 2000, Sierra released Ground Control, a 3D real-time tactics game developed by Swedish-based Massive Entertainment. The game recieved great reviews and many rewards.
At the end of June 2000, a strategic business alliance between Vivendi, Seagram and Canal+ was announced and Vivendi Universal, a leading global media and communications company, was formed. Havas S.A. was renamed Vivendi Universal Publishing and became the publishing division of the new group, divided into five groups: games, education, literature, health and information. The games division included Sierra On-Line, as well as Blizzard Entertainment and Universal Interactive Studios.
[edit] 2001
On 2001-01-23, Vivendi announced the closure of its division Flip.com’s Bellevue offices, costing 39 people their jobs. 30% of Flip.com’s 37 employees would be transferred to Sierra’s offices in Bellevue. Vivendi also laid off several of Sierra’s employees involved in Flip.com.
David Grenewetski stepped down as President and CEO in early 2001, and on May 9, 2001, Sierra On-Line announced the appointment of Thomas K. Hernquist as their new President and CEO. Michael A. Ryder also joined Sierra as COO and and Senior Vice President of Product Development. Hernquist did not stay for long at Sierra though, and Ryder soon took over as the company president.
In early August the same year, WorldStream Communications was one of the many victims of the dotcom crash, and the company was forced to shut down and laid off its 87 employees.
The costs of running the software division, which at this time was largely unprofitable, had become too much to handle for Vivendi and senior officials at Vivendi Universal publishing decided to economically downsize, and a massive reorganization of Sierra was then undertaken:
On Aug 14, Sierra On-Line let the ax fall on Dynamix for the final time and closed the development studio for good. 97 people lost their jobs. Dynamix was viewed by many Sierra fans as the very last remaining piece of the company with a meaningful connection to its legendary past, and with the end of their 17-year history in the business, Sierra On-Line was considered to have taken the final step away from its roots. Dynamix developed a lot of memorable titles for Sierra, but was frequently in financing troubles. In the more aggressive business climate Sierra had entered after the CUC fraud, there was simply no place for unprofitable development studios anymore.
148 more people, at the main offices in Bellevue, lost their jobs on August 15. Many of these people were employed in Sierra’s administrative, marketing and legal divisions, and those functions, along with Sierra’s customer service, and technical support divisions, would now be consolidated and absorbed by Vivendi Universal Publishing and handled by Vivendi employees in Los Angeles. 20 further employees were also transferred to Vivendi’s headquarters.
Sierra also lost its online sales division, which would now become part of Vivendi Universal Publishing’s website. Sierra sold off most of the Sierra Home division and largely discontinued this brand and group. All of it’s titles were discontinued with the exception of Print Artist, which would now be produced by Vivendi’s Los Angeles offices and published under the Sierra brand. These cuts and consolidations were said to be necessary in order to create synergy between Sierra and Vivendi’s other interactive entertainment companies and to create a more efficient operating model for Sierra which would be similar to the organization of Blizzard Entertainment (which was unaffected by these cuts)
In total, 245 people lost their jobs between the cuts at Bellevue and the Dynamix shutdown, and with these cuts Sierra lost more than 40% of its entire workforce.
Layoffs continued on November 9th. Sierra laid off more than 39 employees at the headquarters in Bellevue, which included Bellevue’s entertainment teams and the remains of the Sierra Home teams. These further cuts left 200 people in the Bellevue offices.
Sierra began to lose its brand recognition after this, and within the Vivendi organization it was known as “Vivendi Universal Games Northwest.” However, Mike Ryder, as president, was committed to restoring Sierra to it’s former glory and showed a great deal of interest in reigniting the series that made Sierra what it was such as King’s Quest, Space Quest, Leisure Suit Larry and others, and even met with some of the original designers of these series.
In mid-November, Sierra On-Line changed the design of their logo for the fifth time. To the delight of many old fans it featured the old Half Dome picture, even though the company really had no connection to Yosemite anymore. Still, fans of the old Sierra organization saw this as a sign that there might still be a chance, however small, that they would eventually return to their adventure gaming roots.
[edit] 2002
On February 19, 2002, Sierra On-Line officially announced the change of their name to Sierra Entertainment, Inc. Sierra’s president Mike Ryder claimed in a press statement the new name would "Reflect the company's commitment to developing a broad range of entertainment products, including games for both the PC and next-generation consoles." (Quote from official press release.)
Mike Ryder, as president, was committed to restoring Sierra to it’s former glory and showed a great deal of interest in reigniting the series that made Sierra what it was such as King’s Quest, Space Quest, Leisure Suit Larry and others, and even met with some of the original designers of these series. He was determined to bring Sierra back to the top of the industry. Ultimately, Vivendi officials wanted Sierra to stay right where it was, and Ryder was sacked.
In 2002, to the surprise of many fans, Sierra, working with High Voltage Software, announced the development of a new chapter in the Leisure Suit Larry franchise, titled Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude. Many fans doubted that Sierra, which was now largely only a brand name of Vivendi Universal Games, would be able to produce a legitimate sequel to the beloved series, especially after they learned that the series’ original creator Al Lowe was not involved.
[edit] 2003
Fans were mostly disappointed in 2003, when Magna Cum Laude was released. Gone was the popular hero of the series, Larry Laffer, replaced with a new character, Larry Lovage, the nephew of Laffer, and gone was the clever wit and humor of the series, replaced with gross sexual humor. However, the game sold well despite its numerous flaws, and some fans were pleased when they noticed little nods to the original series, such as the cancelled LSL 4 playing on the computer of the main character Lovage.
By now, Sierra had all but ceased to operate as a developer. Bellevue still developed products such as Print Artist and Hoyle Card Games and Sierra’s two remaining divisions, Papyrus and Impressions Games, still developed many of their perennial titles such as Cesar III and Nascar Racing, but the work of developing was costly and Sierra’s in-house products simply weren’t bestsellers.
Sierra still acquired and published many new IP’s but like Sierra’s other major products, these titles were developed by external, independent developers such as Massive Entertainment and High Voltage Software. Run through Bellevue, Sierra was a major publisher for independent companies.
In late 2003, Mike Ryder was replaced by a man named Kelly Zmak, who was now put in charge of what was left of Sierra as General Manager for the offices in Bellevue and as Vice President of the rest of the company.
Later that year former CEO and Chairman Ken Williams opened a Sierra fansite through which he talked directly to fans, and still operates the site to this day. During 2003, he had approached Mike Ryder, hoping to advise the chief of the company on the company’s strategic direction, but he was bitterly ignored by Sierra officials. As Blizzard Entertainment’s star began to rise, Sierra’s began to fall and Vivendi officials began to wonder if they actually needed Sierra. And things continued as they were…for now
[edit] Since 2004
The newly rechristened Sierra Entertainment continued to develop mostly unsuccessful interactive entertainment products, due to lack of financial investment on Vivendi’s part and rushed releases, again due to Vivendi. However, hits such as Half Life 2 and Homeworld 2 only cemented Sierra’s reputation as a respectable publisher, and with over 300 employees, Sierra, though only a shadow of it’s former glory, was still a major player in the gaming industry, with it’s publishing arm responsible for acclaimed titles, though Sierra was about to be struck a fatal blow.
Even with quite a few recent successes, Sierra’s long history came to a close with a few short strokes in 2004, Sierra’s 25th year of business. Cost-cutting measures were taken, due to parent company Vivendi’s financial troubles, and due to Sierra’s lack of profitability as a working developer: Impressions Games and the Papyrus Design Group were shut down in the spring, and about 50 people lost their jobs in those cuts; 180 Sierra-related positions were eliminated at Vivendi’s Los Angeles offices; and finally in June of 2004, VU Games laid off most of Sierra’s final employees at Bellevue, which cost over 100 people their jobs, and dispersed Sierra’s work to other VU Games divisions. Other titles, such as Print Artist, were discontinued totally; The Hoyle franchise was sold to an independent developer. In total, 350 people lost their jobs. The lights went out at the offices in Bellevue, creator of hundreds of memorable Sierra titles and home of so many memories for all of Sierra’s fans, for the last in time in August of 2004. Vivendi announced that the Sierra brand name and logotype would still be used on VU Games products, run out of VU Games headquarters in Los Angeles.
In January 2006, Vivendi Universal announced that it would now be known simply as Vivendi, and its game division was renamed Vivendi Games. The Sierra name still remained on Vivendi name products, and from 2006 onward, all Vivendi products would be distributed solely under the Sierra publishing label.
[edit] Epilogue
Sierra, throughout the quarter century of its existence, was a company that was beloved in the hearts of its fans; A company which inspired many to design games, to create music and to start companies of their own. It was founded by young and naïve adults who sought only to have fun, and it prospered under the leadership of Ken Williams, a visionary willing to push any technological boundary in order to increase the fun and realism of his products. Sierra was a company whose main attribute was its artistic integrity and it’s warm hearted atmosphere. It’s workers and customers alike formed one big family and this bond was extended through it’s connection to it’s customers and through Ken Williams, who like Walt Disney, was the public face of his company. Its products continue to inspire many, who create fan games and remakes of popular Sierra games as tributes to the old company which once lived and thrived in Oakhurst, California.
Though it will likely never be as powerful or as important as it was, for as is now simply a brand name used to market Vivendi Game’s products, the influence of Sierra on today’s industry, it’s family-like atmosphere and the memory of the innovative, funny, quirky and ultimately beloved titles has never and will never be forgotten. It was a company which virtually birthed the computer gaming industry, and set standards which continue to this day.
Sierra pushed the boundaries of technology beyond its limits and went places never thought possible and never dreamed of. It was a company far ahead of it’s time and also a company too free and light-hearted to survive in the cold corporate world, a company whose spirit was ultimately swallowed by the ambitions of the greedy executives and corporate bureaucrats, who seek to gain more money without regard to creativity and innovation.
The brand name of Sierra continues to be operated through Vivendi Games’ headquarters in Los Angeles. It’s managed out of Vivendi Games’ Los Angeles headquarters by Mark Tremblay, who acts as the President of Sierra’s World Wide Studios. The Sierra brand is composed of four development studios which called Massive Entertainment, High Moon Studios, Radical Entertainment and Swordfish Studios. These companies employ over 600 people which operate under the Sierra umbrella.
[edit] Trivia
- An independent group known as AGD Interactive have remade two of Sierra's classic adventure games from the 1980s.
- Another group, Hero6 was originally formed as a direct result to the cancellation of the Quest for Glory series of games. Hero6 is acknowledged as being the first fan-based game group.
- In the late 1990s, many Sierra games made for Windows had a rather serious bug. If one were to uninstall a game, the uninstaller would delete an important DLL needed for Windows to work properly.[citation needed]
- Half Dome, the famous stone monolith in Yosemite National Park, was added to the company’s logo in the early 1980s.
- The fictional novel Game Quest by Leopold McGinnis is largely based on Sierra's pre Black Monday era.
[edit] Sierra's breakthroughs
- Mystery House: First text adventure to incorporate graphics.
- King's Quest I: First "3D" game
- King's Quest IV: Day/night cycle, first game to support stereo sound card.
- King's Quest V: First game in VGA, first to have CD voice-acting.
- Sierra Screamin' 3D: Sierra supports 3D acceleration in games by marketing their own card.
[edit] Sierra Development Studios
[edit] Brands
[edit] Defunct Sierra Development Groups
- Coktel Vision (Part of Vivendi)
- Dynamix (Closed)
- Impressions Games (Closed)
- Bright Star Technology (Closed)
- Yosemite Entertainment (leading Sierra On-Line developer pre Vivendi acquisition) (Closed)
- Synergistic Studios (Closed)
- Front Page Sports (Closed)
- Books That Work (Closed)
- Green Thumb Software (Closed)
- Papyrus Design Group (Closed)
- Headgate (Sold back to its original owner)
- Berkeley Systems (Closed)
- PyroTechnix (Closed)
[edit] Developers whose games Sierra has published
- Blizzard Entertainment
- Breakaway Games
- Evryware
- Game Arts
- The Whole Experience
- Nihon Falcom
- Relic Entertainment
- Stainless Steel Studios
- Valve
- Monolith Productions
[edit] Sierra's titles (many include pre-Vivendi acquisition)
[edit] Adventure games
- Mystery House (1980, produced in 1979, re-released by SierraVenture in 1982)
- Mission Asteroid (1980, re-released by SierraVenture, 1982)
- The Wizard and the Princess / Adventure in Serenia (1980, re-released by SierraVenture in 1982)
- Cranston Manor (1981)
- Ulysses and the Golden Fleece (1981, re-released by SierraVenture in 1982)
- Time Zone (1982, produced in 1981, re-released by SierraVenture in 1982)
- Softporn Adventure (1981, precursor to Leisure Suit Larry and the only all text based game released by Sierra)
- The Dark Crystal (1982)
- Dragon's Keep (1983)
- Troll's Tale (1983)
- Gelfling Adventure (1984)
- Mickey's Space Adventure (1984)
- The Black Cauldron (1984, re-released in 1986)
- Winnie the Pooh in the Hundred Acre Wood (1984)
- Mixed-Up Mother Goose (1987)
- Gold Rush! (1988)
- Codename: Iceman (1989)
- The Adventures of Willy Beamish (1991)
- Rise of the Dragon (1990)
- Heart of China (1991)
- Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist (1993)
- Slater & Charlie Go Camping (1993)
- Pepper's Adventures in Time (1993)
- Urban Runner (1995)
- Torin's Passage (1995)
- Stay Tooned! (1996)
- RAMA (1996)
- Lighthouse: The Dark Being (1996)
- Lords of Magic (1998)
- Eragon (2006)
- King's Quest series
- King's Quest I: Quest for the Crown (1984, produced in 1983, re-released in 1987, improved version 1989)
- King's Quest II: Romancing the Throne (1985)
- King's Quest III: To Heir Is Human (1986)
- King's Quest IV: The Perils of Rosella (1988)
- King's Quest V: Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder! (1990, CD-ROM version 1991)
- King's Quest VI: Heir Today, Gone Tomorrow (1992, CD-ROM version 1993)
- King's Quest VII: The Princeless Bride (1994)
- King's Quest VIII: The Mask of Eternity (1998)
- Space Quest series
- Space Quest I: The Sarien Encounter (1986, improved version 1990)
- Space Quest II: Vohaul's Revenge (1987)
- Space Quest III: The Pirates of Pestulon (1989)
- Space Quest IV: Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers (1991)
- Space Quest V: Roger Wilco in the Next Mutation (1993)
- Space Quest 6: The Spinal Frontier (1995)
- Leisure Suit Larry series
- Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge Lizards / Leisure Suit Larry 1 (1987, improved version in 1991)
- Leisure Suit Larry Goes Looking for Love (in Several Wrong Places) / Leisure Suit Larry 2 (1988)
- Leisure Suit Larry 3: Passionate Patti in Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals (1989)
- Leisure Suit Larry 4 (unwritten, unreleased - number skipped as a gag)
- Leisure Suit Larry 5: Passionate Patti Does a Little Undercover Work (1991)
- Laffer Utilities (1992)
- Leisure Suit Larry 6: Shape Up or Slip Out! (1993)
- Leisure Suit Larry 7: Love for Sail! (1995)
- Leisure Suit Larry's Casino (1998) (a non-adventure Vegas-style spinoff game)
- Leisure Suit Larry 8: Lust in Space (unreleased)
- Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude (2004), not by Al Lowe
- Lords of the Realm series
- Lords of the Realm (1994)
- Lords of the Realm II (1996)
- Lords of the Realm II: Siege Pack (expansion) (1997)
- Lords of the Realm III (2003)
- Lords of the Realm Royal Collection(1998) (includes I, II, and Siege Pack)
- Police Quest series
- Police Quest: In Pursuit of the Death Angel (1987, improved version in 1991)
- Police Quest II: The Vengeance (1988)
- Police Quest III: The Kindred (1990)
- Police Quest IV: Open Season (1993)
- Police Quest: SWAT (1995, not an adventure game)
- Police Quest: SWAT 2 (1998, real time strategy game)
- Manhunter series
- Manhunter: New York (1988)
- Manhunter 2: San Francisco (1989)
- Laura Bow series
- The Colonel's Bequest (1989)
- Laura Bow II: The Dagger of Amon Ra (1991)
- Conquests series
- Conquests of Camelot: King Arthur, The Search for the Grail (1989)
- Conquests of the Longbow: The Adventures of Robin Hood (1992)
- Quest for Glory series (formerly Hero's Quest)
- Quest for Glory I (a.k.a. Hero's Quest I): So You Want to be a Hero (1989, enhanced version in 1991)
- Quest for Glory II (a.k.a. Hero's Quest II): Trial by Fire (1990)
- Quest for Glory III: Wages of War (1992)
- Quest for Glory IV: Shadows of Darkness (1994)
- Quest for Glory V: Dragon Fire (1998)
- EcoQuest series
- EcoQuest: The Search for Cetus (1991)
- EcoQuest 2: Lost Secret of the Rainforest (1993)
- Gabriel Knight series
- Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Fathers (1993)
- Gabriel Knight 2: The Beast Within (1995)
- Gabriel Knight 3: Blood of the Sacred, Blood of the Damned (1999)
- Phantasmagoria series
- Phantasmagoria (1995)
- Phantasmagoria II: A Puzzle of Flesh (1996)
[edit] Other notable games
- Alien Legacy (1994)
- Casino Empire (2002)
- Sammy Lightfoot (1983)
- Donald Duck's Playground (1984)
- Metal mutant (1991)
- Jones in the Fast Lane (1991)
- Quarky & Quaysoo's Turbo Science (1992)
- Betrayal at Krondor (1993)
- Betrayal in Antara (1997)
- Grand Prix Legends (1998)
- The Realm Online
- Sierra Championship Boxing
- Ultima II: Revenge of the Enchantress
- No One Lives Forever (series)
- Red Baron (developed by Dynamix)
- Aces of the Pacific
- SWAT (series)
- NASCAR Racing
- Tribes: Aerial Assault
- Metal Arms: Glitch in the System
- Homeworld and Homeworld 2
- Half-Life
- F.E.A.R.
- 3-D Ultra Pinball series
- 3-D Ultra Pinball (1996)
- 3-D Ultra Pinball: Creep Night (1996)
- 3-D Ultra Pinball: The Lost Continent (1998)
- 3-D Ultra Pinball: Thrill Ride (2000)
- Dr. Brain series
- Castle of Dr. Brain (1991)
- Island of Dr. Brain (1992)
- The Lost Mind of Dr. Brain (1995)
- The Time Warp of Dr. Brain (1996)
- Dr. Brain Thinking Games: Puzzle Madness (1998)
- The Incredible Machine series (developed by Dynamix)
- The Incredible Machine (1992)
- The Even More Incredible Machine (1993)
- Sid & Al's Incredible Toons (1993)
- The Incredible Machine 2 (1994)
- The Incredible Toon Machine (1994)
- The Incredible Machine 3.0 (1995)
- Return of the Incredible Machine: Contraptions (2000)
- The Incredible Machine: Even More Contraptions (2001)
- City Building Series
- Caesar (1993)
- Caesar II (1995)
- Caesar III (1998)
- Caesar IV (2006)
- Pharaoh (1999) and Cleopatra: Queen Of The Nile (2000)
- Zeus: Master of Olympus (2001) and Poseidon: Master of Atlantis (2002)
- Emperor: Rise of the Middle Kingdom (2003)
- Front Page Sports Football
- Front Page Sports Baseball series
- Outpost series
- Hoyle's series
- Hoyle's Official Book of Games: Volume 1 (1989)
- Hoyle's Official Book of Games: Volume 2 (1990)
- Hoyle's Official Book of Games: Volume 3 (1991)
- Hoyle Casino
- Hoyle Board Games
- Hoyle Card Games
- Hoyle Classic Games
- Hoyle Kids Games
- Hoyle Puzzle Games
- Hoyle Table Games
- Hoyle Solitaire (1996)
- Hoyle Majestic Chess (2003)
- Hoyle Backgammon and Cribbage (1999)
- Hoyle Casino Empire (2002)
- Evil Genius (2004)
- Field & Stream series
- Field & Stream: Trophy Bass 3D
- Field & Stream: Trophy Bass 4
- Field & Stream: Trophy Buck 'n Bass 2
- Field & Stream: Trophy Hunting 4
- Field & Stream: Trophy Hunting 5
[edit] Non-game software
- Homeword (mid-1980's)
[edit] References
- Interview with Ken Williams, Gamasutra, October 2005
An Interview With Russisk Laawson, Module And Graphics Designer: 10/12/06
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
[edit] Company related
- Sierra's official website
- Vivendi Universal Games - official site of the current owners of Sierra
[edit] Sierra game-related pages
- SCI Community - a community based around the Sierra Creative Interpreter, the successor to AGI and the brains behind some of Sierra's classic adventure games series like Space Quest, King's quest, Leisure Suit Larry and others.
- Vintage Sierra - an archive of Sierra On-Line's software catalog. It has been designed as a resource for collectors and a showcase for some of the best software titles ever produced.
- Evryware - official site of Evryware, the design team which created the Manhunter series and Sierra Championship Boxing
- AGD Interactive - a group dedicated to remaking and updating Sierra's classic Adventure Games from the 80's and 90's
- Quest Studios - containing MIDI music (and some MP3/OGG soundtracks too) recorded from Sierra games, as well as other Sierra-related materials
- Sierra Music Central - containing MP3/OGG soundtracks recorded from Sierra games
- Sierra Entertainment - analysis and critique.
- Sierra Game Patches - patches for the classic games so that they work on modern operating systems. Use with DOSBox for best results.
- Adventureland's Coverage of Sierra - This site tries to list all adventure games (interactive fiction) produced over the years.
- Sierra Online catalog - catalog of Sierra Online products from 1983
[edit] Other Sierra-related sites
- Al Lowe's Humor Site - official website of Al Lowe, the creator of Leisure Suit Larry
- Sierra Gamers - maintained by Ken Williams, founder of Sierra
- Sierra Planet - archives of various Sierra-related websites
- Sierra Entertainment profile on MobyGames
- Mark Seibert - official website of Mark Siebert, Music Director for Sierra for several years, Music some game walk throughs
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