Eidos Interactive
Square Enix Europe | |
Formerly | |
Company type | Subsidiary |
Industry | Video games |
Founded | 1984Putney, London, England | in
Founders |
|
Headquarters | , England |
Key people | |
Products | |
Parent |
|
Subsidiaries | § Studios |
Website | square-enix-games |
Square Enix Limited (trading as Square Enix Europe;[a][5] formerly Domark Limited and Eidos Interactive Limited) is a British video game publisher, acting as the European subsidiary of Japanese video game company Square Enix group. It manages Square Enix's Western studios, including Crystal Dynamics, Eidos-Montréal and Square Enix Montréal, contains Square Enix's Western external publishing division, Square Enix External Studios, and indie initiative division, Square Enix Collective. Square Enix Limited's area of activity are Europe and other former PAL territories,[6] while fellow group company Square Enix Incorporated's area of activity are the Americas,[7] and both share "Phil" Rogers as CEO and other executives since 2013.
The company was founded as Domark in 1984 by Mark Strachan and Dominic Wheatley. In 1995, it was acquired by Eidos plc and merged with Simis and Big Red Software to create subsidiary Eidos Interactive the following year. Ian Livingstone, who held a stake in Domark, became deputy chairman of Eidos[8][9] and stayed in various roles, until his departure from the company in 2013.[10][11] In 2005, Eidos plc was in turn acquired by SCi. The combined company, which was briefly renamed Eidos, was bought by Square Enix in 2009. In November 2009, Square Enix completed the merger of its existing European branch with Eidos Interactive, trading the resulting company as Square Enix Europe.
Square Enix Limited is headquartered in Southwark, London (Square Enix London) and has offices in Paris, France (Square Enix France) and Hamburg, Germany (Square Enix Germany).[12][13][14] With the consolidation of Square Enix's Western divisions around 2015,[15] Square Enix Limited and Square Enix Incorporated are collectively referred to as division Square Enix West.[16]
Intellectual properties owned by Square Enix Limited include Just Cause, Life Is Strange and Outriders. They also formerly owned IPs such as Tomb Raider and Deus Ex and several development studios like Crystal Dynamics, but those were sold to the Embracer Group in August 2022.
History
Foundation as Domark (1984–1995)
In 1984, Mark Strachan and Dominic Wheatley founded Domark as a video game publisher.[17][18][19] Its first title was 1984's Eureka!, written by Ian Livingstone.[20] Located within London's Putney district, the company held its own development team, The Kremlin, in the publisher's headquarters basement.[21] Domark published titles such as Championship Manager (1992) and Hard Drivin' (1989).[22]
Transformation into Eidos Interactive (1995–2005)
On 25 September 1995, Eidos plc, a British software company specializing in video compression, acquired Domark alongside Simis and Big Red Software, for a total of £12.9 million;[23] and on 31 May 1996, Simis and Big Red Software were merged into Domark to create subsidiary Eidos Interactive.[24]
Eidos Interactive acquired CentreGold in April 1996 for £17.6 million. CentreGold consisted of distributor CentreSoft and publisher U.S. Gold, which included subsidiaries Core Design and Silicon Dreams Studio.[25][26] The latter would be re-acquired by its founder, Geoff Brown, through newly founded Geoff Brown Holdings, on 16 December that year.[27] The Eidos Interactive acquisition was months prior to the release of Tomb Raider by Core Design, which CentreGold had acquired two years prior.[28] In 2003, Eidos founded Beautiful Game Studios, which continued its Championship Manager series after splitting with previous developer Sports Interactive.[29]
In March 2005, Eidos admitted that cash reserves had dwindled to £11.9 million during the second half of 2004, and pre-tax losses had grown to £29 million. On 21 March 2005, Eidos received a takeover bid from Elevation Partners, the private equity firm owned by former Electronic Arts president John Riccitiello and with a number of notable partners, including U2's lead singer Bono. This takeover valued the company at £71 million, and would inject £23 million in order to keep the company from bankruptcy in the short term.[30] Elevation stated it plans to take Eidos private for some years to focus on game creation and release schedules and its offer was initially recommended by Eidos's board.[31]
Acquisition by SCi (2005–2009)
The following day, 22 March, Eidos received a second takeover bid from the British games manufacturer SCi. The company offered £74 million, and tabled a restructuring plan to cut £14 million from annual costs. To fund this takeover, SCi proposed to sell £60 million worth of stock. Eventually, in late April, Elevation Partners formally withdrew its offer, leaving the way clear for SCi.[32] The Eidos plc takeover was finalized on 16 May 2005, with SCi merging itself into Eidos Interactive's parent, renaming it SCi Entertainment Group Limited. After the SCi purchase, former Eidos management board quit.[33] SCi left its Battersea Office and moved into the old Eidos Interactive office on the second floor of Wimbledon Bridge House, 1 Hartfield Road, Wimbledon.[citation needed]
Ars Technica interviewed former Core Design Studio Manager Gavin Rummery in 2015, who said the studio pitched a Tomb Raider remake for the game's 10th anniversary to SCi in 2005.[28] Rummery stated that SCi loved the project, but Crystal Dynamics had their own demo, which then convinced SCi to cancel Core's project.[28][34] In May 2006, Rebellion Developments acquired Core Designs' assets and staff, while the Core brand and intellectual property, including Tomb Raider, remained in SCi's possession.[35] In December 2006, Warner Bros. license classic properties to SCi, while investing for 10.3% of SCi shares.[36] In February 2007, SCi/Eidos announced a new studio in Montreal, Quebec, which was later named Eidos-Montréal and developed a new game in the Deus Ex franchise.[37][38] In February 2007, it acquired Rockpool Games, along with its two sister companies Ironstone Partners and SoGoPlay.[39] In April 2007, SCi/Eidos acquired Bluefish Media and Morphene.[40] In 2008, Rogers stated they want to be a "leaner and fitter company", as well as "studio-led".[41] They moved "certain functions" from the United Kingdom to Quebec, Canada, partially due to economic advantages offered by Montreal's government.[41] Rockpool Games was closed in 2009.[42]
On 4 September 2007, the board of SCi Entertainment stated that the company has been approached with a view to making an offer, which has been subject to speculation.[43] On 10 January 2008, SCi announced take over and/or merger talks had been halted.[44][45] As a result, the share price dropped by over 50%. Shareholders called for the resignation of key personnel, including chief executive officer (CEO) Jane Cavanagh, over this issue as well as delays to key titles.[46] On 18 January 2008, Jane Cavanagh, Bill Ennis and Rob Murphy left the company.[47] During SCi 2008 financial report, losses were at £100 million, which newly appointed CEO Phil Rogers, a former Electronic Arts executive, stated were due to the reconstructing plans.[48][49] On 19 September 2008, SCi/Eidos opened a Shanghai-based studio, Eidos Shanghai, consisting of a small team to build up relations in Asia.[50] In 2008, SCi/Eidos set up an entity, which later became Square Enix London Studios in their Wimbledon headquarters.[51][52] In December 2008, SCi rebranded as Eidos plc.[53]
Acquisition by Square Enix (2009–2022)
In February 2009, Square Enix reached an agreement to purchase renamed Eidos plc for £84.3 million, pending shareholder approval,[54] with an initial aim of fully buying Eidos Interactive on 6 May 2009.[55] The offer was backed by majority stakeholder Warner Bros.[56] The date was brought forward, and Square Enix officially took over Eidos on 22 April 2009.[57][58] Square Enix initially stated that it would let Eidos remain structured as it was at the time of its takeover.[59] In July 2009, it announced that it would merge Eidos with its own pre-existing European subsidiary, Square Enix Limited (itself established in December 1998).[60][61] The merger would create a new entity, tentatively titled Square Enix Europe.[62][63] The merger was completed on 9 November 2009 with the Square Enix Europe name being permanently retained as the resulting company name.[64] The Eidos name was retained for the development studios Eidos Montreal and Eidos Shanghai.
With the 2013 restructuring of Square Enix,[65] it was hit by layoffs[66] and Rogers became CEO of Americas and Europe.[67][68] In 2014, Square Enix Collective launched, an indie developer service provider headed by Phil Elliot.[69] In January 2017, Norwegian studio Artplant purchased former Eidos franchise Project I.G.I.[70] In November 2017, Square Enix stopped publishing the Hitman franchise and sold the IP to game developer IO Interactive.[71] In September 2018, COO Mike Sherlock died, with Square Enix's executive team assuming his immediate responsibilities.[72] In 2018, Square Enix branded their external publishing division Square Enix External Studios, which is headed by Jon Brooke and Lee Singleton.[73][74][75] In June 2020, Square Enix donated $2.4 million to charities around their Western studios and offices, which were partially raised from sales of its discounted Square Enix Eidos Anthology bundle.[76][77] A new mobile studio called Square Enix London Mobile, working on Tomb Raider Reloaded and an unannounced title based on Avatar: The Last Airbender with Navigator Games, was announced on 20 October 2021.[78]
Acquisition of assets by Embracer Group (2022-present)
In May 2022, Square Enix announced a plan to sell several of Square Enix Europe's assets to Embracer Group for $300 million. These include development studios Crystal Dynamics, Eidos-Montréal, Square Enix Montréal, and intellectual properties such as Tomb Raider, Deus Ex, Thief, Legacy of Kain alongside "more than 50 back-catalogue games", with the deal expected to be completed in the second quarter of Embracer's financial year.[79] On 20 May 2022, Embracer Group (before the acquisition was complete) said that the announcement of this acquisition got an "overwhelming and positive response".[80]
The deal was completed on 26 August 2022. Embracer announced that the subsidiaries and IPs would form as their 12th operative group, under the leadership of Phil Rogers and his management.[81]
Studios
- Square Enix Collective in Blackfriars, London, England; founded in 2014.
- Square Enix London Mobile in London, England; founded in 2021.[78]
Former
- Square Enix Montréal in Montreal, Canada; founded in 2011, sold to Embracer Group in 2022.
- Crystal Dynamics in Redwood City, California, U.S.; founded in 1992, acquired in 1998, sold to Embracer Group in 2022.
- Crystal Northwest in Seattle, Washington, U.S.; founded in 2018.[82]
- Crystal Southwest in Austin, Texas, U.S.; founded in 2021.[83]
- Eidos-Montréal in Montreal, Canada; founded in 2007, sold to Embracer Group in 2022.
- Eidos-Shanghai in Shanghai, China; founded in 2008 and part of Eidos-Montréal since 2019.[50][84]
- Eidos-Sherbrooke in Sherbrooke, Canada; founded in 2020.[85]
- Eidos Studios Sweden in Helsingborg, Sweden; acquired in 2006.[86]
- Beautiful Game Studios in London, England; founded in 2003.
- Core Design in Derby, England; founded in 1988, CentreGold subsidiary, sold to Rebellion Developments in 2006.
- Eidos Hungary in Budapest, Hungary; founded in 2002, acquired and renamed in 2006, closed in 2009.
- Morpheme Wireless in London, England; founded in 1999, acquired in 2007.[87]
- IO Interactive in Copenhagen, Denmark; founded in 1998, acquired in 2004, sold to its management in 2017.
- Hapti.co in Copenhagen, Denmark; founded in 2012, sold off with IO Interactive in 2017.
- Ion Storm in Dallas, Texas, U.S.; founded in 1996, acquired in 1999, closed in 2005.
- Pivotal Games in Bath, England; founded in 2000, SCi subsidiary, closed in 2008.
- Rockpool Games in Manchester, England; founded in 2002, acquired in 2007, closed in 2009.
- Silicon Dreams Studio in Adderbury, England; founded in 1994, CentreGold subsidiary, sold to its management in 1996.
- Toys for Bob in Novato, California, U.S.; founded in 1989, Crystal Dynamics subsidiary, sold to its management in 2002.
Games published
See also
Notes
References
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- ^ "A Look Inside Square Enix's Stylish London Office". Officelovin'. 21 July 2015.
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- ^ "SQUARE ENIX TERMS OF SERVICE". square-enix-games.com. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^ "SQUARE ENIX - Documents". square-enix-games.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2018. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
{{cite web}}
:|archive-date=
/|archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; 12 September 2019 suggested (help)CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Gibson, Ellie (30 September 2005). "Livingstone takes on new role at Eidos". GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
- ^ Remo, Chris (23 April 2010). "Eidos Life President Ian Livingstone Granted British Inspiration Award". Gamasutra. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
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- ^ Martin, Matt (30 September 2013). "Ian Livingstone leaves Eidos". GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
- ^ "Square Enix | Jobs & Career Opportunities". square-enix-games.com. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
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- ^ "SQUARE ENIX - Modern Slavery Act Transparency In Supply Chain Statement". square-enix-games.com. 17 March 2020.
Corporate Structure: i. USA – Eidos Inc. and Crystal Dynamics Inc. ii. Canada – Eidos Interactive Corp. iii. UK – SCi Games Ltd, Eidos Ltd, Centregold Ltd and SCi Entertainment Group Ltd. iv. France – Square Enix SARL. v. Germany – Square Enix GmbH. vi. Denmark – IO Interactive Holdings A/S. vii. China – Eidos Creative Software (Shanghai) Co. Ltd.
- ^ "Hip to be Square: US and EU boss Phil Rogers on the publisher's huge line-up". MCV/DEVELOP. 4 September 2015. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
The industry changes and one of the big things over the last couple of the years has been the European team working hand-in-hand with the American team, and since March this year we've had them working officially across LA and London
- ^ "Square Enix West Material Usage Policy". square-enix-games.com. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
this Policy applies only to games developed and published by Square Enix's western division, not to games developed or published by Square Enix's Japanese affiliates (including Square Enix's Japanese office, Luminous Productions, and Taito Corporation).
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Further reading
- "What went wrong at SCi". MCV/Develop. 22 January 2008.
External links
- Companies based in the London Borough of Southwark
- Square Enix
- Eidos
- British companies established in 1984
- Video game companies of the United Kingdom
- Video game companies established in 1984
- 1984 establishments in England
- Video game development companies
- 2009 mergers and acquisitions
- British subsidiaries of foreign companies