Plain Vanilla Games
This article contains promotional content. (May 2015) |
Industry | Video games |
---|---|
Founded | Late 2010 |
Founder | Thor Fridriksson |
Headquarters | Reykjavík, Iceland |
Key people | Thor Fridriksson |
Products | Video games |
Plain Vanilla Games is an Icelandic game studio based in Reykjavík and in San Francisco, best known as the studio behind QuizUp, the fastest growing iPhone/Android game in history.[1][2]
History
CEO Thor Fridriksson, a former TV presenter who has an Oxford MBA (2009), founded the company in late 2010. It published its first title The Moogies for pre-schooled aged kids on the App store in November 2011 but although critically acclaimed the game turned out to be a major flop which left Plain Vanilla indebted. Looking for a second product, Fridriksson had realized that popular games like Words with Friends and Draw Something merely modified already existing analog games. And while a mobile version of Trivial Pursuit was already on the market, it seemed rudimentary to him, lacking topical range and social interaction.
He went to San Francisco to sell his idea but first ran into a wall of negativity: "It… wasn't easy. I thought I'd just charm my way in front of these VCs, share my big idea for a quiz platform, and they'd throw money my way. Not quite. Just connecting with the right people was a challenge. I'd cold call and ask for meetings, and they'd maybe be willing to set something up for 2, 3 months later. I had to be creative to get in front of these VCs. It maybe even bordered on stalking. In hindsight, maybe it was a bit creepy." [3] In the end he sought out compatriot David Helgason, the CEO of game development company Unity Technologies and with his endorsement received $1.2 million in seed funding. In 2012, he managed to convince an affiliate of Lions Gate Entertainment (LGF) to partner with Plain Vanilla on a trial trivia game for the Twilight series. The game, released in November 2012, was a hit with about 2 million registered users who gave the company valuable feedback. Sequoia Capital started backing them as investors and Plain Vanilla added their partner Roelof Botha to its board, just like Ellie Wheeler of Greycroft Partners, Chinese Tencent also became a strategic partner. The QuizUp app was launched in November 2013 for iPhones.
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