Looking Glass Studios

(Redirected from LookingGlass Technologies)

Looking Glass Studios, Inc. (formerly Blue Sky Productions and LookingGlass Technologies, Inc.) was an American video game developer based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The company was founded by Paul Neurath with Ned Lerner as Blue Sky Productions in 1990, and merged with Lerner's Lerner Research in 1992 to become LookingGlass Technologies. Between 1997 and 1999, the company was part of Intermetrics and was renamed Looking Glass Studios. Following financial issues at Looking Glass, the studio shut down in May 2000.

Looking Glass Studios, Inc.
Formerly
  • Blue Sky Productions (1990–1992)
  • LookingGlass Technologies, Inc. (1992–1997)
Company typePrivate
IndustryVideo games
Founded1990; 34 years ago (1990) in Salem, New Hampshire, U.S.
Founders
DefunctMay 24, 2000; 24 years ago (2000-05-24)
FateDissolved
Headquarters,
U.S.
Key people
Paul Neurath (president; 1990–2000)
Number of employees
120 (1999)
ParentAverStar (1997–1999)
Websitewww.lglass.com at the Wayback Machine (archived February 9, 1998)

Notable productions by Looking Glass include the Ultima Underworld, System Shock and Thief series.

History

edit

Blue Sky Productions, Lerner Research, and Ultima Underworld (1990–1992)

edit

Co-founders of Looking Glass, Paul Neurath and Ned Lerner, met at Wesleyan University where Lerner was a physics major and Neurath studied environmental science. The two worked together on the game Deep Space: Operation Copernicus (1987) before Lerner moved to the West Coast where he worked creating games for Electronic Arts. Neurath found work at Origin Systems, who had moved their business to New Hampshire in 1984. Neurath worked on a number of projects including Ogre (1986) and Omega (1989). His largest project was leading the design of Space Rogue (1989), which he collaborated with Lerner on many of the technical aspects.[1][2] Space Rogue was in turn a major inspiration for Wing Commander (1990) due to its melding of storytelling and space combat elements.

Before the completion of Space Rogue, Origin Systems moved back to Texas along with the majority of the staff.[3] Neurath, not wanting to move, decided to use the former Origin office to start his own studio, Blue Sky Productions, at 59 Stiles Road in Salem, New Hampshire in 1990.[4] Lerner, who had his own company called Lerner Research, supplied funds to help get the operation off the ground.[2]

With a concept to create a first-person dungeon crawler in the vein of Dungeon Master (1987), Neurath began recruiting from the local region. One of his early hires was Doug Church, programmer and graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Church working together with Chris Green of Lerner Research developed a basic three-dimensional, texture mapped demonstration of the game with animation by former Origin artist Douglas Wike.[5][6] The demo was showcased at the 1990 Summer Consumer Electronics Show to attract publisher interest. Richard Garriott and Warren Spector of Origin Systems saw the demo and decided to finance their first game.[7]

The demo, initially named Underworld, was rebranded under the Ultima series. The initial funding for the game was purportedly $30,000, allowing Neurath to hire his initial staff into Blue Sky Productions. The final cost of production was around $400,000[1] and would be released in March 1992 as Ultima Underworld (1992). By the end of production on Ultima Underworld, the company had moved to a new office in Lexington, Massachusetts.[7][8]

LookingGlass Technologies (1992-1996)

edit

Blue Sky Productions began work on the sequel to Ultima Underworld while Neurath and Lerner spoke about merging their two companies. Lerner Research was fresh off the completion of Car & Driver (1992) and had been granted a license to develop EA’s next Madden title for the Sega Genesis for which they needed more development support. The two decided on a name change in order to differentiate themselves from the game company Blue Sky Software.[9] Initially they used the name "Flying Fish Designs" but eventually settled on Looking Glass.[7] The name was chosen both as a reference to the book Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll and to the idea that their game worlds transported people to new worlds. They initially considered “Looking Glass Studios” but decided that their specialty was more in technology.[10]

LookingGlass Technologies Inc. was incorporated on June 29, 1992 with Neurath as President and Ned Lerner as Vice President and Treasurer. John Madden Football ’93 (1992) was the first game released by the new studio, with Ultima Underworld II: Labyrinth of Worlds (1993) following. Origin became a subsidiary of Electronic Arts in September 1992; EA handled all future publishing arrangements with the studio.[2]

The experienced development team led by Doug Church developed System Shock (1994), a pioneering combination of first-person shooter mechanics and immersive systems. The game was decently successful, but initially released on floppy disk which cut out the voiced dialog in its data entry logs, a novel narrative technique for which the game became known.[11] The CD-ROM version utilized voice acting developed by an internal sound team, made up of members from the local band Tribe: Greg LoPiccolo, Eric Brosius, and Terri Brosius – also voice of System Shock’s villain SHODAN – who later moved into a game design role.[12]

LookingGlass moved to a new facility in Cambridge, Massachusetts in Fall 1994.[13] They received $3.8 million of investment from venture capital firms in November of that year.[14] In 1995, the company started publishing their own games under their own label starting with Flight Unlimited (1995).[14] Designed by Seamus Blackley, the game was noted for its realistic physics simulation and was very successful for Looking Glass, selling 300,000 copies by mid-1997.[15][16] The series was followed up by several sequels/

Terra Nova: Strike Force Centuri (1996) was a large multimedia production by the studio. The full-motion cutscenes were shot inside of the Looking Glass offices on a greenscreen, with staff members doubling as actors and producers of the film. The game featured other technological achievements like procedural animation, but the massive production took its toll on Looking Glass, not recouping its production costs.

Looking Glass Studios (1997-2000)

edit

Due in part to the failure of Terra Nova and British Open Championship Golf (1997), Neurath sought outside investment to keep the company afloat. Intermetrics, a Massachusetts-based software company, acquired LookingGlass in 1997. The official name of the company was changed to Intermetrics Entertainment Software, LLC, operating under the trade name of Looking Glass Studios.

The Intermetrics buyout preceded a number of departures at the studio. Co-founder Ned Lerner left to form Multitude with Looking Glass programmer Art Min. Most famously, designer Ken Levine, artist Rob Fermier, and programmer Jonathan Chey who had worked together on a Star Trek: Voyager game canceled in production formed Irrational Games.[17] Irrational formed a studio initially based in the Looking Glass offices, where they co-developed System Shock 2 (1999) and the canceled Deep Cover before becoming fully independent.[18]

During the production of Thief: The Dark Project (1998), Looking Glass hired Warren Spector away from Origin Systems to staff a development arm of the company in Austin, Texas first opened in 1995.[2][19] Though Spector left soon afterwards to join Ion Storm, the Texas office remained open to create console games for various publishers. They created a port of Command & Conquer for the Nintendo 64, Destruction Derby 64 (1999), along with canceled projects Tamiya Racing and Mini Racers.

The lack of success for Looking Glass’ projects continued to exert pressure on the studio, in addition to their difficulties finding publishers. Eidos Interactive published Flight Unlimited II (1997) and both Thief games, Electronic Arts published System Shock 2 and Flight Unlimited III (1999). In 1999, Intermetrics divested their ownership of Looking Glass, leaving them without any financial support.[10] The following year, several publishing deals with Eidos, Sony, and Microsoft fell apart.[20]

On May 24, 2000, Neurath called a meeting attended by all employees. He announced that the studio was closing down and the staff left the building that day, with public announcements following.[20][21] Irrational Games continued work on Deep Cover until its subsequent cancellation; many former Looking Glass staff like Terri Brosius joined them. Development on Thief III was handed to a team led by Thief II project lead Steve Pearsall until it was canceled. A Flight Unlimited spin-off, Flight Combat, which was an estimated three months from completion, was handed to Mad Doc Software to be completed as Jane’s Attack Squadron (2002) as the final game with credits by Looking Glass Studios.

Legacy

edit

Looking Glass Studios has been called one of the most important development studios in the history of video games. Their game catalog including the Ultima Underworld, System Shock, and Thief series are seen as the foundation for the immersive sim genre of action games. Games like The Elder Scrolls: Arena, Deus Ex, and Dishonored are explicitly modeled after Looking Glass’ catalog. The latter two feature designers who were formerly members of Looking Glass.

Ultima Underworld was an influence on id Software’s move to create visually impressive first person shooters. John Romero, who had worked on Space Rogue, conversed with Paul Neurath about the texture mapping technology used in the early Underworld demo. He spoke about this to John Carmack, who implemented the technique into Catacomb 3-D (1991). This technology was crucial to the creation of Wolfenstein 3D (1992) and Doom (1993). [citation needed]

Many other of Looking Glass’ developers went on to work on important AAA games. Ned Lerner joined Sony Worldwide Studios as Director of Engineering where he worked on games through the PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4. Seamus Blackley and other Looking Glass cohorts left to join Dreamworks Interactive, working on the innovative Trespasser (1998). AI programmer on Thief: The Dark Project Tom Leonard joined Valve Corporation where he developed the AI for Source projects including Half-Life 2. Doug Church went on to work for Ion Storm, Electronic Arts, and eventually Valve. Greg LoPiccolo and Eric Brosius joined Harmonix where they played a major role in the development of the Guitar Hero and Rock Band franchises.

Following the closure of Looking Glass, Paul Neurath founded Floodgate Entertainment in Boston, Massachusetts.[22] They ported Ultima Underworld to mobile platforms as well as worked on titles like Dark Messiah of Might and Magic. Floodgate was later acquired by Zynga and merged into the Zynga Boston studio; Neurath became the creative director.[23] After the closure of Zynga Boston in October 2012,[24] Neurath established Otherside Entertainment in 2013. He reassembled many Looking Glass employees to work on a spiritual successor of Ultima Underworld, Underworld Ascendant (2018), initially funded through Kickstarter.

The rights to Looking Glass’ catalog were initially split between various rights holders, which made re-releases of their catalog difficult. Eidos retained the rights to the Thief franchise. Thief: Deadly Shadows (2004) was created by Ion Storm and the reboot Thief (2014) was created by Eidos-Montréal. Stephen Kick of Nightdive Studios secured the rights to re-release the System Shock games and eventually acquired the IP rights to create a remake, System Shock (2023), and a future sequel.

Technology

edit

Games developed

edit

By Lerner Research

edit
Year Title Publisher
1987 Chuck Yeager's Advanced Flight Trainer Electronic Arts
1991 F-22 Interceptor
1992 Car and Driver

By Blue Sky Productions

edit
Year Title Publisher Notes
1992 Ultima Underworld: The Stygian Abyss Origin Systems
John Madden Football '93 EA Sports Sega Genesis version

As LookingGlass Technologies (post-merger)

edit
Year Title Publisher
1993 Ultima Underworld II: Labyrinth of Worlds Origin Systems/Electronic Arts
1994 System Shock Origin Systems
1995 Flight Unlimited LookingGlass Technologies
1996 Terra Nova: Strike Force Centauri
1997 British Open Championship Golf

As Looking Glass Studios (rename)

edit
Year Title Publisher Notes
1997 Flight Unlimited II Eidos Interactive
1998 Thief: The Dark Project
1999 Command & Conquer Nintendo Nintendo 64 port
System Shock 2 Electronic Arts Co-developed with Irrational Games
Flight Unlimited III
Destruction Derby 64 THQ
2000 Thief II Eidos Interactive
2002 Jane's Attack Squadron Xicat Interactive Originally cancelled, finished by Mad Doc Software[25]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Mahardy, Mike (April 6, 2015). "Ahead of its time: The history of Looking Glass". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d Walker-Emig, Paul (January 17, 2018). "From the Archives: Looking Glass Studios". Retro Gamer. No. 177. Future Publishing. pp. 74–79.
  3. ^ Pope, Kyle (December 1, 1989). "Origin Systems will move headquarters, workers to Austin". Austin American-Statesman. pp. D1.
  4. ^ "Game Programmer". The Boston Globe. November 25, 1990. pp. B6.
  5. ^ Neurath, Paul (June 23, 2000). "The Story of Ultima Underworld". TTLG.
  6. ^ Maher, Jimmy (January 18, 2019). "Life Off the Grid, Part 1: Making Ultima Underworld The Digital Antiquarian". Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  7. ^ a b c Spector, Caroline (1993). Ultima VII and Underworld: more Avatar adventures. Secrets of the games series. Rocklin, CA: Prima Pub. ISBN 978-1-55958-251-3.
  8. ^ "Office Manager". The Boston Globe. June 29, 1992. pp. A67.
  9. ^ "Ultima Underworld 2 Interview". TTLG. Retrieved February 15, 2020.
  10. ^ a b Keefer, John (March 31, 2006). "GameSpy Retro: Developer Origins, Page 17 of 19". GameSpy. Archived from the original on June 9, 2007.
  11. ^ Maher, Jimmy (March 19, 2021). "System Shock The Digital Antiquarian". Digital Antiquarian. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  12. ^ Gourley, Bob (October 2, 1994). "Area musicians leave Tribe's sound for a new music". The Boston Globe. pp. City 13.
  13. ^ "Redefine the Leading Edge". The Boston Globe. September 11, 1994. pp. B42.
  14. ^ a b Rosenberg, Ronald (May 3, 1995). "Preparing for takeoff". The Boston Globe. pp. 77, 80.
  15. ^ Von Hoffman, Constantine (July 22, 1997). "The Small Business Page; Software Company Plays Games Against Competition". Boston Herald. pp. Business, 24.
  16. ^ "Looking Glass". Next Generation. No. 4. Imagine Publishing. April 1995. pp. 60–64.
  17. ^ Chey, Jonathan (November 1999). "Irrational Games' System Shock 2". Game Developer: 52–59.
  18. ^ Weise, Matthew (June 29, 2011). "Looking Glass Studios Interview Series - Audio Podcast 5 - Ken Levine". gambit.mit.edu. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  19. ^ "LEADING EDGE Game Co". Austin American-Statesman. May 7, 1995. pp. K18.
  20. ^ a b Sterrett, James (May 31, 2000). "Reasons for the Fall: A Post-Mortem On Looking Glass Studios". TTLG. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  21. ^ IGN Staff (May 24, 2000). "Looking Glass Broken". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  22. ^ Fleming, Jeffrey (September 14, 2009). "Gamescape: A Look at Development in North America's Cities, Page 1 of 8". Gamasutra. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  23. ^ Watts, Steve (March 24, 2011). "Zynga acquires Floodgate Entertainment". Shacknews. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  24. ^ Orland, Kyle (October 24, 2012). "Zynga lays off 5 percent of workforce, closes 3 offices (updated)". Ars Technica. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  25. ^ Reilly, Luke (April 1, 2013). "5 More Defunct Developers Who Went Out With a Bang". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved July 8, 2019.