Ubisoft Entertainment (formerly Ubi Soft) is a computer and video game publisher and developer with headquarters in Montreuil, France. The company has facilities in over 20 countries, including development studios in Montreal, Canada; Barcelona, Spain; Shanghai, China; North Carolina, USA; Düsseldorf, Bulgaria, Germany; and Milan, Italy, amongst other locations. As of 2004, it is the third-largest independent video game publisher in Europe, and the seventh largest in the US. The "Ubi" in Ubisoft is sometimes pronounced or more often *. (See IPA phonetic notation.)
Ubisoft's mascot is Rayman.
History
The five brothers of the Guillemot family founded Ubisoft as a computer game publisher in
1986 in
France. Yves Guillemot soon made deals with
Electronic Arts,
Sierra On-Line, and
Microprose to distribute their games in France. By the end of the decade, Ubisoft began expanding to other markets, including the United States, the
United Kingdom, and
Germany.
In the early 1990s, Ubisoft initiated its in-house game development program which led to the 1994 opening of a studio in Montreuil, France, which later became their headquarters. That same year, Michel Ancel created the Rayman character, a character which still stars in new video games as of 2006. Ubisoft became a publicly traded company in 1996 and continued to expand to offices around the globe, opening locations in Shanghai and Montreal.
In 2000, Ubisoft acquired US-based Red Storm Entertainment, the game development studio founded by techno-spy novelist Tom Clancy, already famous in its own right for games based on Clancy's books. In 2001, the company purchased Blue Byte Software, known for the Settlers series. By 2003, Ubisoft reported operations in 22 countries, nine of those containing production or design offices. Ubisoft had a number of successful and award-winning games that year, including Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell, The Sands of Time, XIII, Rayman 3, Raven Shield and Beyond Good and Evil.
Ubisoft's revenue for 2002-2003 was €453 million; for fiscal year 2003-2004, this grew to €508 million. As of 2004, Ubisoft employs more than 2,350 people, of which over 1700 are classed as working in production. Yves Guillemot, a founding brother, is the chairman and CEO.
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Ubisoft committed itself to online games by getting behind Ages Beyond Myst, The Matrix Online, and the European and Chinese operation of EverQuest. The publisher established ubi.com as its online division. But in February 2004, Ubisoft cancelled the online portion of Uru and backed out of the publishing deal on The Matrix Online. Regardless, only a week later the company announced its acquisition of Wolfpack Studios, developers of fantasy MMORPG Shadowbane, and in July 2004, its Pandora Tomorrow was released for the Xbox and PlayStation 2 with what some considered a revolutionary online multiplayer feature.
On December 20, 2004 Electronic Arts (EA) purchased a 19.9% stake in the firm. At the time, Ubisoft released a statement saying they considered the purchase "hostile" until they had further information on EA's intent.
Criticism
Ubisoft is known to use
Starforce copy protection that installs drivers on a system and is suspected to cause problems with some hardware and compatibility issues with certain operating systems, starting with the game
Chaos Theory which as of the time of writing (February 2nd 2006) is not compatible with
Windows XP Professional x64 Edition
On the 14th of April 2006 Ubisoft confirmed that they will stop using Starforce on their games citing complaints from the customers.
1
Upcoming games published by Ubisoft
Edit Note: While Lumines was published by Ubisoft, Lumines II (fall 2006) is being published by
Buena Vista Games and
Bandai.
Games developed/published by Ubisoft
This is a partial list of games developed and/or published by Ubisoft.
- Advance Guardian Heroes (2004) — GBA
- Alexander (2004) — PC
- Rise of a Soldier — PS2, Xbox
- Ape Escape 2 (2003) — PS2
- Asphalt Urban GT (2004) — DS.
- Dark Alliance (2004) — GBA
- Rise of Sin Tzu (2003) — Xbox, PS2
- Battle Realms (2001) — PC
- Beyond Good & Evil (2003) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC
- Earned in Blood Xbox, PS2, PC
- Capitalism 2 (2001) — PC
- Catz 5 (2002) — PC
- Chessmaster (2003/2004) — Xbox, PS2, PC
- Conflict Zone (2001) — PS2
- '' Frontier Wars (1999) — PC
- Dragon Riders (2001) — DC, PC
- Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2003) — Xbox, PS2, GBA
- Crime Scene Investigation (computer game) (2004) — Xbox, PC
- Cold Fear (2005) — PC, Xbox, PS2
- Destroyer Command (2002) — PC
- Dogz 5 (2002) — PC, GBA
- '' Morrowind (2002) — PC, Xbox
- F1 Racing Championship (2001) — PC, PS2, Dreamcast
- Far Cry (2004) — PC
- Urban Dance Uprising — PS2
- Fred (1989) — Atari ST520
- The Settlers (2005) — PC
- Heroes of Might and Magic V (2005) — PC
- Heroes of the Pacific — PC
- The Time Quest (1999) — PC
- IL-2 Sturmovik (2001) — PC
- Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1993) — NES
- Iron Lord (1989) — Atari ST520
- Jimmy Connors Pro Tennis Tour (1993) — NES
- Peter Jackson's King Kong — PC, PS2, GCN, Xbox, Xbox 360, PSP, NDS
- Modern Air Combat (2003) — PC
- Lunar Legend (2001) — GBA
- Masters of Metal (2003) — PS2, GC
- Myst Masterpiece Edition (2000) — PC
- Night Hunter (1989) — Atari ST520
- Pacific Fighters (2004) — PC
- Paradise (2006) — PC
- POD (Planet of Death) (1996) — PC
- Ruins of Myth Drannor (2001) — PC
- The Sands of Time (2003) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC, GBA, (2005 DS)
- Puffy's Saga (1988) — Atari ST520
- Rayman (1996) — PC, PS1, GBC
- Rayman Gold (1997) — PC
- Rayman Designer (1997) — PC
- Rayman Forever (1998) — PC
- Rayman Collector's Edition (1999) — PC
- Rayman 2: The Great Escape (1999/2000) — PC, N64, DC, PS1
- Rayman M (UK Release) (2001) — PC, PS2
- Rayman Arena (2002) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC
- Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc (2003) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC, GBA, MAC, N-GAGE
- Rayman DS (2005) — DS
- Hoodlum's Revenge (2005) — GBA
- Rocky Legends (2004) — Xbox, PS2
- Secret of the Silver Earring (2004) — PC
- The Rise of Chaos (2003) — PC
- Silent Hunter III (2005) — PC
- Sprung (2004) — DS
- Apprentice of the Force (2004) — GBA
- Return of the General Lee (2004) — Xbox, PS2
- The Political Machine (2004) — PC
- The Sum of All Fears (2002/2003) — GC, PC, GBA
- Ghost Recon series
- Rainbow Six series
- Rogue Spear (1999) — PC, Mac, DC, PS1
- Raven Shield (2003) — PC
- Raven Shield#Rainbow Six 3 console versions (2003) — Xbox, PS2, GC
- Lockdown (2005) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC
- Vegas (In development) — Xbox 360,PS2, Xbox, PS3
- Splinter Cell series
- Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell (2003) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC
- Pandora Tomorrow (2004) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC
- Chaos Theory (2005) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC
- Essentials (2006) — PSP only
- Double Agent (In development) — Xbox, PS2, PC, Xbox 360
- Tonic Trouble (2000) PC, N64
- Prehistoric Punk (2005) — Xbox
- Hair Affair! — GBA
- Twinworld (1989) — Atari ST520
- Warlords Battlecry II (2002) — PC
- Heroes of Etheria (2003) — PC
- Will Rock (2003) — PC
- XIII (2003) — Xbox, PS2, GC, PC
- Yohoho! Puzzle Pirates (2005) — PC
See also: Ubisoft Entertainment games
External links
Computer and video game companies | Companies of France | 1986 establishments
Ubisoft | Ubisoft | Ubisoft | Ubisoft | Ubisoft | ユービーアイソフト | Ubisoft | Ubisoft | Ubisoft | Ubisoft | Ubisoft | 育碧软件