List of Bullfrog Productions games

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Bullfrog Productions was a British video game developer located in Guildford, England. It was founded in 1987 by Peter Molyneux and Les Edgar as a successor to their software company Taurus Impact Systems, with Molyneux as the studio's chief game designer.[1] The company's first release was a 1988 Amiga port of the 1987 Commodore 64 game Druid II: Enlightenment, and its first original game Fusion was released a few months later. Bullfrog's second game, Populous (1989), garnered widespread attention and awards, and sold over four million copies, leading the company to grow to around twenty employees.[1][2] It was followed by a sequel, Populous II: Trials of the Olympian Gods (1991), as well as eight other games by 1995 in several genres including Syndicate (1993) and Theme Park (1994), the first games in the Syndicate and Theme series. By this point, Bullfrog was widely considered to be one of the most innovative and imaginative video game companies in the world.[3][4][5]

Electronic Arts, Bullfrog's primary publisher, bought the studio in 1995 and made Molyneux and Edgar vice-presidents; the company quickly grew from 60 to around 150 employees.[6][7][8] Bullfrog released six more games over the next three years, including Dungeon Keeper (1997), the first game in the eponymous series; Molyneux, disliking his new role at Electronic Arts, decided to leave the company in 1996, changing roles to finish the development of Dungeon Keeper and leaving entirely at its conclusion in 1997 along with several other employees to found Lionhead Studios.[9] Bullfrog released a further five games between his departure and 2001 in the Populous, Dungeon Keeper, and Theme series, as well as a port of Quake III Arena (1999), after which it was merged into EA UK and effectively closed as a development studio.[1] During its lifetime Bullfrog Productions released twenty-two games and two ports, primarily for various personal computer systems and often with later PlayStation versions, and worked on at least nine other titles which were cancelled in various stages of development.

Games

Developed

Games developed by Bullfrog Productions
Title Details

Original release date:
October 1988[10]
Release years by system:
1988 – Amiga, Atari ST[11]
Notes:

Original release date:
April 1989[13]
Release years by system:
1989 – Amiga, Atari ST,
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game, God game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[14]
  • Part of the Populous series
  • Super NES and Sega Genesis ports developed by Imagineer[17][18]
  • Two expansion packs, Populous: The Final Frontier (1989) and Populous: The Promised Lands (1990), developed by Bullfrog and published by Electronic Arts; The Final Frontier included with issue of The One magazine[15]
  • Nintendo DS remake (2008) developed by EA Studios Japan and published by Xseed Games[16]
  • Original game and The Promised Lands included in Populous: Platinum Edition (1990), also released under other names[15]

Original release date:
June 1990[19]
Release years by system:
1990 – Amiga, Atari ST[19]
Notes:
  • Platform game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[19]

Original release date:
November 1990[20]
Release years by system:
1990 – Amiga, Atari ST[20]
1991 – PC-98, X68000
1992 – DOS, FM Towns, Sega Genesis
1993 – Super NES
1994 – MacOS, Sega CD
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[20]
  • Uses the Populous engine
  • Powermonger and Populous II included in Populous II/Powermonger (1994, DOS) compilation by Electronic Arts[21]
Bullfrogger

Original release date:
September 1991[22]
Release years by system:
1991 – Amiga[22]
Notes:

Original release date:
November 1991[23]
Release years by system:
1991 – Amiga[24]
1992 – Atari ST, Sega Genesis, X68000[24]
1993 – DOS, FM Towns, TurboGrafx-16, Super NES[24]
1994 – MacOS[24]
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game, God game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[25]
  • Sequel to Populous
  • Part of the Populous series
  • One expansion pack, Populous II: The Challenge Games (1992, Amiga), developed and published by Bullfrog[26]
  • Populous II and Powermonger included in Populous II/Powermonger (1994, DOS) compilation by Electronic Arts[21]
Psycho Santa

Original release date:
December 1992[27]
Release years by system:
1992 – Amiga[27]
Notes:

Original release date:
6 June 1993[28]
Release years by system:
1993 – Amiga, DOS, MacOS[29]
1994 – Sega Genesis, Super NES,[29]
1995 – 3DO, Atari Jaguar[29]
2006 – PSP (EA Replay)[30]
Notes:

Original release date:
6 May 1994[34]
Release years by system:
1994 – DOS[35]
1996 – PlayStation, Sega Saturn[35]
Notes:
  • Action game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[35]
  • Part of the Magic Carpet series
  • An expansion pack, Magic Carpet: The Hidden Worlds (1995), developed by Bullfrog and published by Electronic Arts[36]
  • Original game and The Hidden Worlds included in Magic Carpet Plus (1995) compilation by Electronic Arts[37]

Original release date:
June 1994[38]
Release years by system:
1994 – Amiga,[39] 3DO, DOS,[40]
1995 – Atari Jaguar, MacOS, PlayStation, Sega Genesis, Sega Saturn,[40] Super NES[41]
2007 – Nintendo DS (Theme Park DS)[42]
2011 – iOS (remake)[43]
2012 – Android (remake)[44]
Notes:
  • Construction and management simulation game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[38]
  • Part of the Theme series
  • Modified Japanese version New Theme Park (1997, PlayStation and Sega Saturn) developed by EA Japan and published by Electronic Arts[45][46]
  • Remake for Nintendo DS Theme Park DS (2007) developed by EA Japan and published by Electronic Arts[42]
  • Mobile remake Theme Park (2011) developed and published by Electronic Arts for iOS and Android[43][44]
Tube

Original release date:
1994[11]
Release years by system:
1994 – Amiga, DOS[11]
Notes:
  • Racing game
  • Published by and exclusively distributed in several magazines[11]

Original release date:
August 1995[47]
Release years by system:
1995 – DOS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn[48]
Notes:

Original release date:
1995[11]
Release years by system:
1995 – DOS[11]
Notes:
  • Action game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[49]
  • Also known as Magic Carpet 2: The Netherworlds
  • Sequel to Magic Carpet
  • Part of the Magic Carpet series

Original release date:
24 June 1996[50]
Release years by system:
1996 – DOS[51]
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[51]

Original release date:
31 October 1996[52]
Release years by system:
1996 – DOS[52]
1997 – PlayStation[53]
Notes:
  • Real-time tactics game, Shoot 'em up game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[53]
  • Sequel to Syndicate
  • Part of the Syndicate series

Original release date:
28 March 1997[54]
Release years by system:
1997 – DOS, Windows[54]
1998 – PlayStation[55]
Notes:
  • Construction and management simulation game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[55]
  • Part of the Theme series

Original release date:
26 June 1997[56]
Release years by system:
1997 – DOS, Windows[57]
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game, God game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[56]
  • Part of the Dungeon Keeper series
  • One expansion pack, The Deeper Dungeons Mission Disk (1997), developed by Bullfrog and published by Electronic Arts[58]
  • Dungeon Keeper Gold (1998) includes original game and Deeper Dungeons[57]
  • A 2014 reboot developed by Mythic Entertainment and published by Electronic Arts[59]

Original release date:
30 November 1998[60]
Release years by system:
1998 – Windows[61]
1999 – PlayStation[61]
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game, God game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[61]
  • Part of the Populous series
  • One expansion pack, Undiscovered Worlds (1999), developed by Bullfrog and published by Electronic Arts[62][63]

Original release date:
17 December 1998[64]
Release years by system:
1998 – PlayStation[65]
2000 – Windows[65]
Notes:
  • Construction and management simulation game
  • Developed by Tose and published by Electronic Arts; Bullfrog was a producer and did some testing[65][66]
  • Part of the Theme series

Original release date:
7 July 1999[67]
Release years by system:
1999 – Windows[67]
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game, God game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[67]
  • Sequel to Dungeon Keeper
  • Part of the Dungeon Keeper series

Original release date:
4 November 1999[68]
Release years by system:
1999 – Windows[69]
2000 – MacOS, PlayStation, PlayStation 2[69][70]
Notes:
  • Construction and management simulation game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[69]
  • Also known as Theme Park 2, Sim Theme Park and Theme Park Roller Coaster
  • Part of the Theme series
  • Expanded version released as SimTheme Park: Gold Edition (2002)[71]

Original release date:
30 January 2001[72]
Release years by system:
2001 – Windows[72]
Notes:
  • Construction and management simulation game
  • Published by Electronic Arts[72]
  • Also known as SimCoaster and Theme Park Manager
  • Part of the Theme series

Ports

Games ported by Bullfrog Productions
Title Details

Original release date(s):
July 1988[8][73]
Release years by system:
1988 – Amiga[8]
Notes:
  • Original game developed by Electralyte Software and published by Firebird Software in 1987 for the Commodore 64[73]

Original release date(s):
28 March 2001[74]
Release years by system:
2001 – PlayStation 2[74][17]
Notes:

Cancelled

Cancelled games developed by Bullfrog Productions
Title Details
Ember

Cancellation date:
By 1989[76]
Proposed system release:
N/A
Notes:
  • Puzzle game
Colony

Cancellation date:
By 1989[76]
Proposed system release:
N/A
Notes:
Hell

Cancellation date:
By 1989[76]
Proposed system release:
N/A
Notes:
  • Shoot 'em up game

Cancellation date:
1997[77]
Proposed system release:
Windows[77]
Notes:
  • Real time strategy game
  • Project begun in 1991 as a puzzle game[77]
Void Star

Cancellation date:
1998[78]
Proposed system release:
Windows[78]
Notes:
  • Real time strategy game

Cancellation date:
1998[79]
Proposed system release:
Windows[77]
Notes:
  • Action game
Genesis: The Hand of God

Cancellation date:
1999[80]
Proposed system release:
Windows[80]
Notes:
  • God game
  • Cancelled early in development[80]
Theme Movie Studio

Cancellation date:
2000[80]
Proposed system release:
N/A[80]
Notes:
  • Construction and management simulation game
  • Game cancelled while in concept stage[80]

Cancellation date:
March 2000[81]
Proposed system release:
Windows[81]
Notes:
  • Real-time strategy game, God game
  • Sequel to Dungeon Keeper 2
  • Part of the Dungeon Keeper series

References

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External links