British gaming firm enlists army of players to create
Worlds Adrift
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[May 17, 2018]
By Eric Auchard
LONDON (Reuters) - British game maker Bossa
Studios will release Worlds Adrift on Thursday, an ambitious adventure
game designed to appeal to the Minecraft generation that has taken three
years and 50,000 gamers to create.
The London-based independent games designer is pushing technical,
logistical and financial boundaries by counting on gamers to build
floating islands for their characters to inhabit, which other players
can visit via airborne, pirate-like ships.
"Worlds Adrift allows you to go into the game and set your own
objectives and go about the game however you choose," said Henrique
Olifiers, one of the company's three co-founders.
Bossa was set up in 2010 by veteran game designers who first focused on
making social games played on Facebook before switching to PC-based
online games. It is best known for "Surgeon Simulator" and "I Am Bread",
which have drawn in millions of users with their physics-based,
realistic movements.
Its new multiplayer online game is the first to run on the computational
platform of Improbable, a second London firm which enables enormous
cloud-based simulations to be created, without which Worlds Adrift's
complex, user-generated landscape would be impossible. It is far more
sophisticated than prior Bossa games.
Bossa aims to create the next big European games franchise, following in
the footsteps of household names such as Microsoft-owned <MSFT.O>
Minecraft, Clash of Clans from Tencent-controlled <0700.HK> Supercell,
Candy Crush by Activision Blizzard's <ATVI.O> King, and Angry Birds
creator Rovio <ROVIO.HE>.
Typically only established gaming companies with hundreds of engineers
and hundreds of millions of dollars could develop games of the
complexity of World's Adrift which have massive creative potential and
are not limited to scripted tasks.
Eight months ago, Bossa Studios raised $10 million in funding in a round
led by European venture firm Atomico. It has 82 employees but is
expanding rapidly with the recent funding, Olifiers said.
Improbable, whose system can be used to digitally simulate real-world
locations not just for games but in product design and corporate
planning, received a $502 million investment from the Softbank <9984.T>
Vision Fund a year ago.
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Roberta Lucca (2L) spokesperson for Bossa Studios joins gamers and
journalists playing "Worlds Adrift", "whilst suspended in a life
size "Sky Ship" based on the game, above Chelsea College of Arts
during the launch in London, Britain May 16, 2018. Matt
Cowan/Handout Bossa Studios UK via REUTERS
"Unlike any other massively multiplayer online (MMO) game, your actions actually
impact the virtual world - and matter," says Improbable co-founder Herman
Narula.
Gamers will build and develop increasingly complex islands which players can
visit and interact with other game participants however they wish.
It is a massive fantasy universe designed to appeal to a younger generation of
players looking to build games themselves.
The title is aimed at gamers reared on open-ended Minecraft, the second
best-selling game of all time, which provides players with building materials to
construct buildings and villages. It has attracted a sizeable number of players
under the age of 15, although the majority of them are over 28 so far, Olifiers
said.
During development those gamers have created 10,000 islands, 450 of which will
feature as the game launches in "early access" mode, meaning that it is still
under construction and subject to changes. General release is expected within a
year, said Olifiers, a Brazilian games journalist-turned-entrepreneur.
Policing the game is left to players, by design, Olifiers said. Creative
contributions will be quickly mimicked by others and collaboration will be
beneficial. Bad behavior could prompt users to abandon islands where incidents
take place, turning them into Robinson Crusoe outposts no one else visits.
The game goes on sale later on Thursday at a fixed price of 19.49 pounds, or
$24.99, with no in-game purchases that can pile up costs for committed players.
(Reporting by Eric Auchard in London; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)
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