Former Blizzard devs at Red 5 Studios plan their own MMO
Gamasutra has an excellent interview up with a company called Red 5 Studios. Their CEO, Mark Kern, served as a former team lead on World of Warcraft (though it's been a while -- since a little less than a year after the game's launch), so WoW fans (and Blizzard themselves) are curious about what the studio is up to. Unfortunately, they're staying vague at this point -- while they are definitely working on some kind of fantasy MMO, they're not exactly forthcoming about what it'll be.They do say what they're not -- "we're not trying to be a sequel to WoW," Kern says. And they don't consider themselves in the same areas as Warhammer Online and Tabula Rasa, two games that showed promise earlier this year but never broke out as their developers expected. Instead, they want to do something different with the MMO idea, but as for specifics, don't hold your breath. They don't have a business model planned out quite yet, and even the game's announcement is "months" off.
So for now, we'll have to wait. It should be interesting to see what, if anything, comes out of the studio -- many people have said that WoW can only be topped by Blizzard themselves, and while having a history at Blizzard doesn't necessarily prepare you for making brilliant games every time (see Hellgate: London, created by former Diablo devs), it would be interesting to see if Kern (who has made his mark on WoW) can help Red 5 get another success together.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Odds and ends, Blizzard, Making money, Interviews






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
matthew Dec 26th 2008 9:18AM
Another fantasy MMO? Seriously? God shoot me now, I am so sick of dragons, androgynous elves and spells. Give me something futuristic damnit.
P.S. Eve is not it, don't even go there.
Lilene Dec 27th 2008 6:41PM
I would kill for a steampunk MMO.
Kasuro Dec 26th 2008 9:35AM
All of the talk of post-apocalyptic MMOs has my ear. Maybe a historical MMO? Pick a time period. I say one that is Greco-Roman themed, where you can play as a Roman or one of the various tribes/nations/what have you that they conquered? I'm not much for history.
Bunkai Dec 26th 2008 4:02PM
I vote for Feudal Japan.
dpoyesac Dec 26th 2008 10:13AM
Best MMO idea ever:
someone needs to hunt down Steve Jackson of Steve Jackson games, give him insane amounts of money and make an MMO out of...
Car Wars.
Kakistocracy Dec 26th 2008 5:48PM
Do I need to be the voice of reason here?
I think we all know what happens when Steve Jackson gets involved with the creation of computer games.
Aerei Dec 26th 2008 10:16AM
I can only hope they're associated with the comics company of the same name and they're going to make an Atomic Robo based MMO.
Hardy Dec 26th 2008 10:21AM
Fantasy MMO could work still, as long as it's not DnD or Lord of the Rings type fantasy.
Midevil maybe, Elizabethan era possibly? Basically you can take any type of world and as long as it doesn't use advanced technology and it's still fantasy. :P
Here's hoping, the original WoW developers are good, but they can screw it up like the Hellgate guys did.
Strahl Dec 26th 2008 11:36AM
That's called Ultima Online and has been around for over a decade. Go play. :)
Todd Dec 26th 2008 10:29AM
"we're not trying to be a sequel to WoW"
Red 5 Studios would benefit from making an MMO that closely relates to the WoW gameplay/mechanics. Already a proven success.
Cowy Dec 26th 2008 2:53PM
My thoughts as well. So many of these MMO's come and go because they all want to be SOOO different from WOW.
Why not use what works? Personally I get a tad irritated when a new MMO comes out and it has to be SO UNIQUE that the control style feel unnatural, the gameplay seems awkward, and the content is lack-luster. I was really looking foward to trying Spellborn, untill I learned about the play style and the "unique" User Interface. yay...
It's not a bad thing to use WOW as a model. Take the good, avoid the pitfalls, Try a little better for balance, throw in logical (somewhat) and intriguing Lore/storylines and it should do ok.
And don't be scared of animal/monster Races. I'm no "furry" but I do tend to find all human-like races somewhat boring.
Clevins Dec 26th 2008 4:56PM
if it's too similar people will simply continue with WoW. Why move to another game that will have issues (all new games do) if it's very close to what WoW is? It sounds good to say 'take the good, leave the bad' but everyone interprets that differently.
PeeWee Dec 26th 2008 11:02AM
No need to worry. If they just got started, it'll be years before we see anything released. At the very least.
PeeWee Dec 26th 2008 11:21AM
I stand corrected, they've been "secretly" working on this project for three years. Still, if they believe in their own idea, one would expect a hype to be building right about now.
Chilblain Dec 26th 2008 11:13AM
Flop...
Can't believe software companies are still dumping money into MMO development.
"No, no, this MMO will be different!"
Osi Dec 26th 2008 12:58PM
Because some MMOs are huge successes (whether financially, or popularity), and are still around.
Most people dismiss 2d MMOs, but there are many more successful ones of those then the crappy 3D ones that are out now days.
Shardrell Dec 26th 2008 11:55AM
"We're working on something we won't tell you anything about and it'll be super great and totally different! Honest!"
Yuh huh. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzz...
Tythian Dec 26th 2008 12:21PM
My vote: Shadowrun MMO (future tech, spells, dragons, trolls/orcs/dwarves/elves/humans... got it all in a package.
Car Wars would be a close second though...
Gamer X Dec 26th 2008 12:58PM
I would agree that a Shadowrun MMORGP would be increatable.
There are a little of everything in that world and enough mystery and conspericy to keep questing or doing runs exciting.
Back in Oct. 2007 Microsoft sold the game rights back to Jordan Weisman the original creator and since then no news anounced.
http://www.smithandtinker.com/news/index.php
Jim Dec 26th 2008 1:08PM
Uhm. Hrm. Way to be on the ball.
Red 5 has been gathering themselves for about two years now. They made big waves in early 2007 for their "Golden Ticket" recruiting campaign - they identified what they considered to be the 100 prospects in the game industry, and sent each of them customized pitches to come work for Red 5.
WSJ carried an article about it here: http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB118071923725321635.html?mod=sblink_past_reports