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Mark Jacobs (game designer)

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Mark Jacobs is the former GM/VP/CEO of Mythic Entertainment, Inc. He is one of the pioneers in the massively multiplayer online role-playing game industry, having created two early MUDs, Aradath and Dragon's Gate serving as both the designer and programmer in addition to his duties as President/CEO. He founded A.U.S.I. (Adventures Unlimited Software Inc.) in 1983 and worked on a number of computer games for systems such as the Apple II. He is also a screenwriter having penned a number of screenplays including one based on the game Imperator Online.

He is known for his strong position against "real money transfer", aka "gold selling".[1] Jacobs left EA in June 2009 after the company decided to merge BioWare with Mythic Entertainment.[2]

Biography

Mark attended Syracuse University and graduated, Magna Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He then attended Georgetown University Law Center and graduated with a Juris Doctor. While at GULC, he started his first computer game company, Adventures Unlimited Software Inc. in 1983. In the 1980s and until 1995, Mark created online games for both local networks and nationwide networks such as GEnie, AOL and Kesmai's Gamestorm network.

In 1995, he was the co-founder (along with Rob Denton) and President and CEO of Mythic Entertainment, Inc.. He has been involved in all Mythic Entertainment games since 1995, including their most successful product, the MMORPG Dark Age Of Camelot.[3]

Games

  • Attack of the Killer Bees (designer, programmer, A.U.S.I., 1983)
  • Aradath (Lead designer, programmer,CEO A.U.S.I., 1984)
  • Galaxy (Lead designer, programmer, CEO A.U.S.I., 1989)
  • Dragon's Gate (Lead designer, programmer, CEO, A.U.S.I., 1990)
  • Splatterball (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1996)
  • Magestorm (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1996)
  • Castles II - Online (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1996)
  • Aliens Online (designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1997)
  • Rolemaster: Bladelands (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1997)
  • Darkness Falls (computer game) (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1997)
  • Starship Troopers: Battlespace (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1998)
  • Godzilla Online (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1998)
  • Splatterball Plus (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1999)
  • Darkness Falls: The Crusade (Lead designer, head acrobat, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1999)
  • Silent Death Online (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1999)
  • Spellbinder II - The Nexus Conflict (designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1999)
  • Darkstorm: Well of Souls (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 1999 - never completed)
  • Independence Day Online (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2000)
  • Imperator Online (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2001)
  • Dark Age of Camelot (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2001)
    • Dark Age of Camelot: Shrouded Isles (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2002)
    • Dark Age of Camelot: Trials of Atlantis (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2003)
    • Dark Age of Camelot: Foundations (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2003)
    • Dark Age of Camelot: 'New Frontiers' (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2004)
    • Dark Age of Camelot: Catacombs (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2005)
    • Dark Age of Camelot: Darkness Rising (Lead designer, EA Mythic, 2006)
    • Dark Age of Camelot: Labyrinth of the Minoatour (EA Mythic, 2007)
  • Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning (Lead designer, CEO Mythic Entertainment, 2008)

References

  1. ^ "A banning we will go, a banning we will go. Heave ho off the servers yo, a banning we will go!". Online Games Are a Niche Market. Retrieved 2010-01-24.
  2. ^ Grayson, Nathan (06/27/09). "Mark Jacobs Bids Mythic Farewell, Spills No Beans on His Way Out". MaximumPC. Retrieved 24 January 2010. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Takahashi, Dan (May 29, 2008). "A Q&A with Mark Jacobs, EA's chief warrior on Warhammer Online". VentureBeat. Retrieved 24 January 2010.