Mike Wilson

Michael S. Wilson (born 1970), is an American business executive, video game producer, and film-maker. Beginning his career at DWANGO as Vice President of Development before being hired to lead marketing and publishing at id Software in, Wilson has subsequently co-founded multiple independent video game publishers, including , , , and.

Eary career
Wilson began his career in his early 20s as Vice President of Development for DWANGO, an early online gaming service based in the United States, which pioneered the use of a nationwide network of servers to host multiplayer sessions of Doom, Quake, Duke Nukem 3D, Shadow, Heretic, and other video game titles.

Wilson joined id Software in 1995 to help lead marketing for the company's gaming catalog, and subsequently oversaw the launches of several prominent games in id's line-up, including new installments of the Doom and Heretic/Hexen franchises.

Wilson also led the launch of the retail shareware version of Quake through use of encrypted CD-ROMs. According to David Kushner in Masters of Doom, this was a strategic miscalculation, initially formulated as an attack on id Software's publisher at the time, GT Interactive. When the encryption used by the software backing the id STUFF digital catalog was cracked and a known as qcrack was created, the entire catalog of id Software's games was suddenly widely available without a purchase being required.

Wilson was heavily involved in the participation of id Software in Microsoft's 1995 Judgment Day event. Again according to Masters of Doom, Alex St. John could not have called id at a better time since to Wilson, "life was a party that never died." Wilson would create an enthusiastic press release for id Software, stating, "We are leading Microsoft down the highway to Hell." During the finals of the attached Deathmatch '95 tournament, a Dallas-local three-man industrial band who were friends of Wilson, Society of the Damned, played while dressed as the Pope, Jesus, and Satan. According to St. John, their style was so harsh, and their presentation so blasphemous, that the Microsoft PR team had finally had enough, and they directed two security guards to storm the stage and shut off the band's equipment during performance of the song Gods of Fear.

Wilson left id Software at the end of 1996 to join John Romero and Tom Hall for the launch of the game development company,. Wilson served as CEO from December 1996 to the end of 1997. Wilson and other executives exited Ion Storm following a public conflict with another partner in the company, Todd Porter, who became CEO after Wilson's departure.