Ninja Theory

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Ninja Theory, Ltd.
Type Private
Industry Video game industry
Founded March 2000 (as Just Add Monsters)
Headquarters Cambridge, England, UK
Key people Mike Ball (chief technology)
Nina Kristensen (chief development)
Tameemi Antoniades (chief design)
Jez San
Products Heavenly Sword
Kung Fu Chaos
Enslaved: Odyssey to the West
Parent Independent
Website http://www.ninjatheory.com/

Ninja Theory, Ltd. is an independent video game developer based in Cambridge, England. Originally founded as Just Add Monsters in March 2000, the company was purchased by former Argonaut Games CEO Jez San in November 2004.[1]

History

The team developed its first game, Kung Fu Chaos, in 2003 exclusively for the Xbox, which was published by Microsoft Game Studios. Ninja Theory's second game, Heavenly Sword, for the Sony PlayStation 3 was released in September 2007 and features a "free style" combat action system.[2] The developer was nominated for five Develop Industry Excellence Awards for the game, including best new IP, visual arts, audio accomplishment, technical innovation, and best independent developer.[3]

In June 2008, the company licenced NaturalMotion's morpheme animation system.[4] Ninja Theory's third game, titled Enslaved: Odyssey to the West, was released for both the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 and was published by Namco Bandai Games. Previously, Enslaved was believed to be a sequel to Heavenly Sword until Ninja Theory confirmed otherwise; stating that such a game is "extremely unlikely".[5]

At the Capcom Tokyo Games Show conference on September 15, 2010, it was announced that Ninja Theory were developing a reboot of the Devil May Cry franchise under the name of DmC: Devil May Cry.[6] The game was released on January 15, 2013 on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.

It was announced that Ninja Theory is collaborating with Chillingo and Electronic Arts on their first mobile game, Fightback, released in summer 2013.[7]

Games developed

as Just Add Monsters

Year Game Platform(s)
2003 Kung Fu Chaos Xbox

as Ninja Theory

Year Game Platform(s)
2007 Heavenly Sword PlayStation 3
2010 Enslaved: Odyssey to the West PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC[8]
2013 DmC: Devil May Cry PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC
2013 Fightback iOS
TBA New IP[9] TBA

Exclusive relationship with Sony Computer Entertainment

In May 2005, Ninja Theory were on the verge of becoming defunct due to the collapse of the gaming studio Argonaut Games; however, soon after the announcement was made, the BBC reported that Sony Computer Entertainment had signed them up to make an exclusive video game for the upcoming PlayStation 3.[10]

The teased Heavenly Sword 2 was cancelled[11] for the time being. In June 2010, Ninja Theory expressed their interest in making another title and commented that they would have made a sequel had Heavenly Sword performed better in sales.[12]

Before the multi-platform release of Enslaved: Odyssey to the West; there were rumours claiming that the quality of the PS3 version was poor compared to the Xbox 360 version, Ninja Theory addressed these concerns by stating, "All formats are developed simultaneously so it wouldn’t be possible for one format to be cared for more than the other."[13] In its technical analysis of the final release, Eurogamer's Digital Foundry team noted, "None of the disadvantages of either version are real game-breakers and overall either version is recommended, but if you own both consoles and have the choice of which version to buy, the Xbox 360 release is the one to get."[14]

References

External links

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