Blizzard Entertainment Inc. - MobyGames (original) (raw)

Moby ID: 21

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Blizzard Entertainment Inc. was founded as Silicon & Synapse in 1991 in Irvine, California by Allen Adham and Michael Morhaime, with Brian Fargo, the CEO and founder of Interplay Entertainment, being granted a share in the company to improve the prospects of working jointly for the young studio. Frank Pearce also joined upon inception as the first employee.

The small company initially did many ports, converting games from one platform operating system to another, including board games (Battle Chess, Lexicross), strategy games (Castles), sports games (MicroLeague Baseball), and educational games (Dvorak on Typing). However, they were the first American developer to release a Super Nintendo title with RPM Racing, which became one of the first ten launch titles for the platform in North America.

It was not until Silicon & Synapse collaborated with Interplay Entertainment on the SNES side-scroller The Lost Vikings that the company had its critical – though not commercial – breakthrough. With some acclaim, the game hit the shelves in 1993. Its release, along with Rock n' Roll Racing (also 1993) led Nintendo to name the studio its "Developer of the Year". Tragically, the release of the two games coincided with the death of the 16-bit console market, and neither title sold well.

Facing a lack of success in the console market, and not willing to bet solely on one market, the company continued developing several 16-bit console titles while branching out by starting development on two new games: Games People Play, a crossword/word game that was never completed, and WarCraft: Orcs & Humans.

Blackthorne was released under the new name Chaos Studios, but conflicts with an unregistered trademark for "Chaos" forced the company leadership to again consider a new name. In February 1994, upon acquisition by Davidson & Associates, one of the largest educational software publishers, it was changed to Blizzard Entertainment.

Blizzard became an influential development studio thanks to well-received franchises such as WarCraft, Diablo and StarCraft. The studio garnered many awards and a great deal of commercial success; building one of the most profitable games ever with the release of World of WarCraft in 2004. A good deal of the success for the company's online games can be attributed to Battle.net, a free online gaming service on the Internet. In the 2000s and 2010s, Battle.net was crucial in establishing Blizzard's esports dominance with titles like StarCraft: Brood War, StarCraft II, Hearthstone and Overwatch.

In their strategy titles, the official map editors helped create a strong modding community, resulting in the spawning of the MOBA genre originally as maps for WarCraft III: The Frozen Throne, and later as standalone titles without Blizzard's involvement or dependency on their games. Blizzard themselves were slow to react to the trend, releasing their own MOBA title Heroes of the Storm in 2015.

Blizzard's successful streak would end in the mid-2010s, with key figures from the company started leaving in large numbers, usually to newly-founded companies of their own. Public perception of the company would shift more negatively due to a larger focus on mobile games (e.g. the infamous announcement of Diablo: Immortal at BlizzCon 2018), botched game reworks (WarCraft III: Reforged and Overwatch 2), focusing on the Chinese market until the split with NetEase in 2023 (eventually resolved in 2024), and an ongoing major lawsuit in California filed in 2021 by current and former employees claiming that discrimination and sexual misconduct is present in the company culture.

The company's ownership has shifted many times over the years, through mergers, name changes or acquisitions:

In its history, the company also had many titles in development that were eventually canceled. These include:

Known subsidiaries

Internal teams

Credited on 102 Games from 1991 to 2024

Displaying most recent · View all

WarCraft I: Remastered (2024 on Windows)
WarCraft II: Remastered (2024 on Windows)
WarCraft: Remastered - Battle Chest (2024 on Windows, Macintosh)
StarCraft: Remastered (2024 on Windows Apps)
WarCraft Rumble (2023 on iPhone, Android, iPad)
Diablo IV (2023 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One...)
Diablo IV (Deluxe Edition) (2023 on Windows, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4...)
Diablo IV (Ultimate Edition) (2023 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One...)
World of WarCraft: Dragonflight (Collector's Edition) (2022 on Macintosh, Windows)
Overwatch 2 (2022 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One...)
Diablo: Immortal (2022 on Windows, iPhone, Android...)
Diablo II: Resurrected (2021 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One...)
Diablo II: Resurrected - Prime Evil Collection (2021 on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Windows...)
Blizzard Arcade Collection (2021 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One...)
World of WarCraft: Shadowlands (Collector's Edition) (2020 on Windows, Macintosh)
Call of Duty: Black Ops - Cold War (2020 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One...)
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 - Campaign Remastered (2020 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One)
Call of Duty: Warzone (2020 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One)
WarCraft III: Reforged (2020 on Windows, Macintosh)
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare (2019 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One)

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History +

April 10, 2024

Company renews contract with NetEase in a deal struck by Microsoft's gaming arm.

January 23, 2023

Company loses presence in mainland China after the NetEase contract expiry.

November 17, 2022

Company fails to negotiate a contract renewal with NetEase over game publishing in China.

September 22, 2022

Company announces the acquisition of Proletariat.

August 15, 2013

The open beta of the Battle.net application is launched.

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Trivia +

Awards

Company contact and location information (2008):

Blizzard Entertainment

P.O. Box 18979 Irvine

California 92623

United States

Company phone: +1-949-955-1382

Company email: [email protected]

Company contact and location information (Nov. 1994):

Blizzard Entertainment

P.O. Box 18077

Irvine, CA 92713

United States

Company phone: +1-714-556-5571 or +1-800-953-SNOW

BBS: +1-714-556-4602