Raven Software

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Revision as of 10:02, 24 November 2011 by Janizdreg (talk | contribs) (see also: employees list, minor rearrangement based on relevancy to Doom)


Raven Software logo

Raven Software is a computer game software developer based in Madison, Wisconsin. The company was founded in 1990 by brothers Brian and Steve Raffel. The company formed with five men, one computer, a basement and a vision of creating a role-playing game for the Amiga computer platform.

Raven has a history of working with id Software, the latest such project being Quake 4, which was released on October 17th, 2005 for PC, and November 22nd for Xbox 360. During his tenure at id, John Romero was the primary link between the two companies. Following ZeniMax Media's acquisition of id Software, further partnerships are less likely to happen.

Since id's acquisition by ZeniMax Media, the Heretic and Hexen brands appear to remain with Activision and Raven, rather than id, although this appears to only apply to new products created within those brands (or new ports of the original products); id still has distribution rights over the original releases of 3 of the 4 games in those series (sans Heretic II, which id did not co-publish originally), and in fact publishes them on Steam.

In 1997, Raven Software joined forces with Activision in a publishing deal to combine Activision's publishing and distribution resources with Raven Software's development team. The same year, six of Raven's developers left to create Human Head Studios: Chris Rhinehart, Paul MacArthur, Shane Gurno, Ben Gokey, James Sumwalt, and Ted Halsted.

Games

Raven Software developed two Doom engine games, and one Doom 3 engine game:

Raven Software also created Shadowcaster using a post-Wolfenstein 3D, but pre-Doom engine created by John Carmack, and sequels for Heretic and Hexen using the Quake engine. Other games released by Raven include the Soldier of Fortune series, Star Trek: Voyager - Elite Force, Star Wars: Jedi Outcast, Singularity and others.

See also

External links

This article incorporates text from the open-content Wikipedia online encyclopedia article Raven Software.