List of Atari SA subsidiaries
Atari SA is a French holding company originally founded in 1983 as Infogrames Entertainment, S.A. by businessman and politician Bruno Bonnell.
Current
Atari VCS, LLC
Atari VCS, LLC is a holding company that was founded in 2017 to help develop the Atari VCS console.
Atari Blockchain
Atari Blockchain was founded in 2021 as part of a split of Atari SA's main operations. This subsidiary focuses on Cryptocurrency and Blockchain.
Atari Chain Ltd.
Atari Chain Ltd. is based in Gibraltar and was founded in March 2020 to help handle the production and distribution of the Atari Coin Cryptocurrency.[1]
Atari Europe S.A.S.U.
Atari Europe S.A.S.U., formerly Infogrames Multimedia SA and Infogrames Europe SA, is the European distribution arm of the company, and was originally founded in 1992 to help develop and publish games for various multimedia gaming platforms including
Atari Gaming
Atari Gaming is based in Los Angeles, United States and was founded in 2021 as part of a split of Atari SA's main operations. This subsidiary handles all the video game-related work.
Atari, Inc.
Atari, Inc. is the main publishing and distribution arm for the company in North America. It was founded as GT Interactive in 1993 by original parent company GoodTimes Entertainment. Infogrames acquired 70% of the company in December 1999,[2][3] After acquiring the remaining ownership of the company in June 2000, it was renamed to Infogrames, Inc.[4] and soon afterwards merged with Infogrames North America, before gaining its current name in May 2003.
The GT Interactive brand was sold during Atari's bankruptcy sale in July 2013 to Tommo, and later Billionsoft in 2017, until Atari purchased back the GT Interactive trademark and select titles in April 2023.[5]
Atari Interactive, Inc.
Atari Interactive, Inc. is the owner of the Atari brand name. It was acquired by Infogrames as Hasbro Interactive, Inc. from parent company Hasbro in January 2001 and was effectively renamed Infogrames Interactive, Inc. in the process.[6] The company owned the Atari and MicroProse brands and with this ownership, allowed all of Infogrames' subsidiaries to rebrand under the Atari brand in May 2003, with Infogrames Interactive, Inc. renamed as Atari Interactive, Inc. at the same time.
Infogrames, LLC
Infogrames, LLC is a video game publishing company, outside the "Atari" brand, founded in Los Angeles and occasionally in Paris in April 23, 2024.
Atari Japan KK
Atari Japan KK is the Japanese distribution and publication arm of Atari SA. It was originally formed in October 2000 as Infogrames Hudson KK, a joint-venture with Japanese developer and publisher
MobyGames
MobyGames, a crowdsourced video game website, was acquired by Atari SA from Blue Flame Labs on March 8, 2022,[8] after an initial plan to purchase the site in the previous November.[9]
Former
Atari Melbourne House
In 1999, Infogrames purchased the video gaming assets of Australian-based Beam Software, and renamed them Infogrames Melbourne House, after Beam's publishing division. The developer was renamed to Atari Melbourne House in May 2003, following the rebranding of Infogrames' subsidiaries under the Atari brand.
Under their ownership, Atari Melbourne House focused mainly on racing titles and third-person shooters.
In November 2006, Atari Melbourne House was sold to fellow-Australian developer Krome Studios[10] and was renamed Krome Studios Melbourne, where they became a support developer for titles produced at Krome's head offices in Brisbane until their closure in October 2010.
Cryptic Studios
On December 9, 2008, Infogrames announced they would acquire online game developer Cryptic Studios. Cryptic was known for their online titles
On May 17, 2011, Atari deemed their future in the MMO market as a "discontinued operation" and announced they would sell Cryptic Studios.
Eden Games
The Infogrames development team who developed V-Rally spun-off in January 1998 as Eden Studios, with Infogrames obtaining a small stake in the business. Infogrames fully purchased Eden in May 2002 for. The company continued with their development of racing games, including V-Rally 3 and Test Drive Unlimited, and branched off onto other genres with Kya: Dark Lineage, Titeuf: Mega Compet and the 2008 Alone in the Dark reboot.
The company began experiencing issues with Atari following the low sales of Test Drive Unlimited 2, when they laid off over 51 of the 80 employees working, leading to the company's remaining employees going on strike.[17] In April 2012, Eden began negotiations as an attempt for separation from Atari due to accusations having been spread through the company and its employees.,[18] however Atari claimed in May 2012 that they were disposing of Eden, but confirmed that they would not shutter the company.[19] On January 29, 2013, Eden Games filed for judicial liquidation.,[20] with Eurogamer reporting on April 12 that the studio had shut its doors.[21]
In October of the same year, Eden reopened as an independent developer with no association or connection with Atari, mostly focusing on titles for mobile devices and the Nintendo Switch. The company was later purchased by Engine Gaming & Media, who sold the developer to Blockchain software company Animoca Brands in April 2022.[22]
Europress
Infogrames acquired the software division of British publishing company
Humongous Entertainment
Humongous Entertainment was acquired within the purchase of GT Interactive in November 1999, who acquired Humongous themselves in 1996. Humongous were known for developing and publishing the "Junior Adventure" series of children's titles, alongside others. The company also held a subsidiary – Cavedog Entertainment, aimed for more mature titles.
After the purchase, Humongous' co-founders
The studio struggled with titles after this, with Infogrames rejecting a majority of ideas and pressuring them to continue making Backyard Sports titles, which Infogrames deemed as the only profit-making brand from Humongous.
In August 2005, Atari, Inc. sold Humongous Entertainment to Infogrames Entertainment itself for shares worth US$10.3 million, effectively dissolving the developer as was. Infogrames then used the assets to form up a new subsidiary, titled Humongous, Inc.[25][26]
As part of the deal, the assets were transferred to a new Infogrames subsidiary (Humongous, Inc.), while the employees of Humongous Entertainment were laid off. Infogrames is expected to sell Humongous, Inc. further. On the same day, Atari, Inc. signed an agreement with Homongous, Inc. to exclusively distribute the company's games in North America through March 2006, which was later extended through March 2007.
Humongous, Inc.
Humongous, Inc. was formed by Infogramess to hold the Humongous assets and brands without being bound to any agreement from Atari, Inc. They signed an exclusive distribution deal with them in North America up to March 2006, and was extended through March 2007. Following the expiration of this license, Humongous would re-release the Junior Adventure series in retail in 2007 and signed a publishing agreement with
On January 21, 2013, Humongous, Inc. was one of the Atari SA subsidiaries to file under
Infogrames Lyon House
Infogrames Lyon House was Infogrames' in-house development studio. They are known for developing the Looney Tunes-based title Sheep, Dog 'n' Wolf for the PlayStation and Microsoft Windows.
On October 2, 2002, Infogrames announced the studio's closure as part of their restructuring plans,[29] which was finalized by December. During the period, various ex-Lyon House developers began their own start-up studios, including Dream On Studio.[30]
Infogrames North America
On April 19, 1999, Infogrames announced the purchase of publisher Accolade for $50 Million, as part of their strategy to gain a distribution network in North America.[31] The deal included their workforce of 145 employees, an internal development studio, and various vehicle licenses such as Jaguar, Land Rover and Jeep. Accolade were known for producing the Major League Baseball-endorsed Baseball series Hardball, and racing franchise Test Drive.[32]
Following the purchase, Infogrames rebranded the division as Infogrames North America in May 1999, before E3.
Following the purchase of GT Interactive and rebranding as Infogrames, Inc. in June 2000, Infogrames North America was consolidated as a subsidiary of Infogrames, Inc.[34] The merger was fully completed on October 3, 2000, and Infogrames North America was completely folded as a result.[35][36] The internal development studio was shuttered by Infogrames after work on the console/PC version of Test Drive Cycles was cancelled.
During the Atari bankruptcy holdings in July 2013, game publisher Tommo purchased the "Accolade" trademark and several related assets.,[37] these later went to Hong Kong-based holding company Billionsoft in June 2017, who soon announced with Tommo that they would develop new entries for several Accolade franchises, such as Bubsy.[38][39] Several titles formerly belonging to Accolade including Slave Zero were purchased by Ziggurat Interactive in March 2020.[40]
On April 19, 2023, Atari announced that they had re-purchased the Accolade trademark and selected Accolade titles formerly held by Billionsoft and Piko Interactive.[5]
Infogrames Sheffield House
Gremlin Interactive was purchased by Infogrames during the acquisition of their parent company Gremlin Group plc in March 1999.[41] The company known for their Actua Sports series of Sports games, among other titles.
The purchase led to several commercially released flops, such as
DMA Design
The Scottish-based developer DMA Design was acquired in the Gremlin Group plc purchase in March 1999. DMA are known for developing the
Legend Entertainment
Legend Entertainment was acquired by Infogrames within the GT Interactive purchase in June 2000. GT previously purchased Legend in December 1998, which are known for releasing Star Control 3, among other adventure and action titles.
On December 18, 2003, Atari announced that Legend Entertainment would close in January 2004 following the completion of Unreal II: The Awakening – Expanded Multiplayer, with Atari citicing that they had no projects in development.[46]
MicroProse
MicroProse was acquired within the Hasbro Interactive purchase in January 2001. The brand along with its development teams was known for releasing strategy titles such as
Through 2001 and 2002, Infogrames began a process of phasing out the MicroProse name. Much of MicroProse's Hasbro-era titles and sequels to existing MicroProse titles were released under the Infogrames or Atari brands, and the development teams at Chipping Sodbury and Hunt Valley were rebranded as Infogrames Interactive Chippenham Studio and Infogrames Interactive Hunt Valley Studio respectively. The final two games branded under the MicroProse name were
In December 2007, the MicroProse trademark and brand name were sold by Atari Interactive to the Interactive Game Group, which filed for transfer of trademark protection on December 27, 2007.[50] Interactive Game Group merged with an Airsoft gun company called the Cybergun Group in 2010, and the MicroProse trademark was later purchased by "TitanIM" co-creator David Lagettie in 2018, who revived MicroProse as a full publisher in May 2020.[51]
Paradigm Entertainment
Paradigm Entertainment was purchased by Infogrames for $19.5 million on June 29, 2000.[52] The company was most well-known for their racing games on the Nintendo 64, including Beetle Adventure Racing and Pilotwings 64.
Under Infogrames/Atari, Paradigm branched off to multi-platform development, continuing with racing and driving games such as
In May 2006, Atari announced that they would sell Paradigm Entertainment to THQ.[53] The deal was closed in July 2006, and also included the Stuntman IP, which Paradigm had been developing a sequel to.[54] THQ closed the studio down in November 2008, following financial difficulties and lower-than-expected sales for Stuntman: Ignition.
Reflections Interactive
Reflections Interactive was acquired within the purchase of GT Interactive in November 1999, who acquired the developer the year prior. The company developed the financially-successful Driver which would go on to spawn a franchise. Reflections also developed Stuntman, a side-project developed during the production of Driver 3.
Following low sales of Driver 3 and Atari's financial difficulties, the company sold Reflections and the Driver franchise to Ubisoft in July 2006 for US$24 million.[55] The Stuntman franchise was not included in the purchase, as it had been already sold off to THQ in May during the sale of Paradigm Entertainment.
Shiny Entertainment
SingleTrac
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