Good bot
That’s the kindest thing anyone’s ever said to me on the internet. I’d like to be a robot.
You are… and you’re a lovely one.
Isn’t Journey from That Game Company? Love that game.
Its the publisher. Caught me out at first as well :)
Ahh got it. Dang that is sad!
Stray was excellent
It’s kind of funny. The studio wanted to spin off to be independent. So everybody resigning, is effectively doing the same thing. It’s not like there’s big heavy machinery they have to move. The studio is the people.
If they start their own company, they have successfully totally spun off
This is not the stray team, the article picture confuses the story. They should’ve used the Annapurna logo instead but they probably wanted more clicks.
Unless theyre blocked by a non-compete
Eh, reputation is still a thing and they probably aren’t getting to keep any of the IPs they worked on, like Stray or Outer Wilds. They also won’t get to keep whatever cash the company might have had in reserve. My understanding is that the idea of spinning off a studio to be indie is that you get to keep developing your IPs to some extent, you still have your brand and your reputation, etc. Otherwise they probably would have done this at the beginning.
So, no, they didn’t really spin it off heh.
Not exactly the same. First of all, a new company hasn’t formed yet and if it does it won’t retain as many of the original staff because it doesn’t have the same momentum as one formed through a legal separation of the companies while everyone is still employed.
It also can’t retain the rights to Stray which would have provided some funding. And it doesn’t retain the rights to whatever projects they had in development, so they won’t have anything to work on for a while.
That legal spinning off was actually pretty important.
I just played Sayonara Wild Hearts. It’s very aesthetic. Fun gameplay.
Best wishes to the staff :)
I hope they make a new, properly indie company.
Well damn. I hope they can get a start under a new company. Annapurna has been kind of a seal of approval for high quality, small dev team games that weren’t the usual triple A bullshit or obvious cash grabs.
Isn’t it enough that shitty games have to bear that triple A warning label these days?
Hey now, not every AAA game is shitty. The Monster Hunter games have been gorgeous and I’m excited for their next game
I mean I had actually had a conversation a long while ago when I originally fell in love with Annapurna games about my perceived dangers of it being run almost single handedly by a billionaire playing around with her Dad’s money that the level of control she had would make it risky to treat like a legitimate company but they really put the gold star stamp of approval on so many games they made and published.
Honestly this won’t really hurt the billionaire. She has the publishing contracts still and whatever partial finished games were already in development but I really do hope the best for the actual talent and employees.
I really want to see them help push into that more united gaming labor force that the Henry Stickman developers foundation (Outersloth), and other groups are doing to let them actually help games be unique and good.
They should start their own company with blackjack and hookers.
In fact, forget the blackjack and the company!
What responsibilities do publishers do to benefit the developers these days, with Steam available for self-publishing? Looking for an honest explanation, as I read some wiki pages and don’t really understand the value of publishers (same for book publishers).
Man, I loved Gorogoa and What Remains of Edith Finch, and while I don’t know a ton about the publishing business, I did recognize Annapurna as a company that published good games. I hope these staffers go on to keep finding good indie games to publish.
If anyone keeps tabs on this, please post whatever new company they create/join because I’m interested in seeing what games they get involved with in the future.
Was t there just an announcement that they’d be partnering up with remedy for control 2 and control universe media?
That’s Annapurna Pictures, which still exists, so that is probably still happening. Annapurna Interactive was the branch of Annapurna that did game publishing, and the rest of the branches still have staff AFAIK
I’m rooting so hard for them.
It’s weird. Looking at my game catalog, a large percentage of my favorite games are all Annapurna. I will miss them.
They all quit, so presumably they’ll attempt to establish themselves as a new publisher. I am.very much hoping for an announcement of that soon. If Annapurna, the parent company, was trying to blend their agencies, it’ll be interesting to see if they can maintain the quality of their productions.
Publishing requires a lot of starting capital. I wouldn’t hold my breath, tbh.
They have a solid catalog and a lot of talent on board. I hope everyone is able to land on their feet. It would be a shame to lose out on those great minds.
They all quit, so I think they have a plan.
They don’t have a solid catalog anymore, they quit the company that owns the publishing rights to the catalog.
These aren’t the developers quitting. It’s the publisher’s staff. Like If the employees of Republic Records all quit, Universal Music Group would still have the right to publish Taylor Swift’s or John Legend’s next album.
And now when you buy their games none of moneys will go to the actual devs??
(Or do they get royalties?)Arr, what a shitty system we built for ourselves.
Annapurna was a publisher team, not a dev team (that published a lot of indie teams’ games). I’m not entirely sure how this affects the devs though since I’m in general software development and not game development.
When Warner Bros shut down Adult Swim’s game publishing team a few months ago, they did at least give publishing rights back to the original devs so something similar might end up happening here.
That being said it’s also possible that all of the games Annapurna published get put in licensing limbo and the original devs get screwed over by this if the Annapurna parent company doesn’t want to give up their publishing rights.
The Annapurna Interactive entity still exists and still has contracts with developers and platform owners.
What’s happened is that all their staff left. People have been moved over from other Annapurna divisions in an effort to keep things running but its likely a lot of institutional knowledge has been lost.
If I was a developer with a title being managed by them I would be very concerned for its future.