Trivia

Hard

The First Independent Console Video Game Developer Was?

Activision
Square Enix
Capcom
Ubisoft

Answer: Activision

In the current age of abundant and widely developed video games, the idea that there would be a significant separation between those who make the hardware and those that make the games is so standard as to be assumed unless otherwise indicated. We buy our computers, consoles, smartphones, and handheld gaming devices from one company and then we buy all (or nearly all) the games we’ll ever play on those devices from an entirely different company.

In the early days of video game development, however, that wasn’t the case. Video game hardware developers, like Fairchild, Magnavox, and Atari all had to not only prove the value of their system to a public largely unfamiliar with video games, but they employed their own software developers to build killer titles that drew that same public in. That might have been a necessary evil, but it didn’t sit well with early developers as they had no financial incentive to create a blockbuster game (whether a title sold 1,000 copies or 1,000,000 copies made no difference to their pocketbooks).

As such, it wasn’t long before game developers jumped ship and headed out on their own. In 1979, Atari programmers David Crane, Larry Kaplan, Alan Miller, and Bob Whitehead met with the then-CEO of Atari Ray Kassar to discuss compensation and the premise that game developers should be rewarded like musicians (more sales would lead to more compensation). According to Kaplan, Kassar suggested that anyone could do their job and refused to entertain the idea of further compensating the programmers.

Three of the four men, Crane, Miller, and Whitehead, promptly left the company and founded Activision (Kaplan soon joined them). Their departure not only created the first third-party development house for video game consoles, but it also gutted the Atari design department (which in turn led to a legal battle that dragged on until 1982).

Decades on Activision (now Activision Blizzard) is valued at over 14 billion dollars, has over a dozen subsidiaries, and is responsible for popular modern titles like the Call of Duty and Guitar Hero series. Atari, on the other hand, folded and split in 1984 after the North American Video Game Crash of 1983 and now exists largely as a licensing entity for the titles that put it on the map back in the 80s. While avoiding the Video Game Crash would have been tricky, perhaps Mr. Kassar should have kept his star programmers and diversified his portfolio.

More Trivia Questions

Trivia

Hard

The Only Puppet In The World With The Rank Of “General” Is?

Trivia

Hard

What Iconic 1980s Toy Was Introduced At None Other Than The Iconic Studio 54 Nightclub?

Trivia

Easy

Recently Mathematicians Around The Globe Have Taken To Hoarding?

Trivia

Hard

Which Game Featured A Massive Easter Egg That Originated As A Player Rumor?

Trivia

Very Hard

Super Glue Was Invented In Researchers’ Quest To Create?

Trivia

Hard

If You Are A Quatorzième, You Are A What?

Trivia

Hard

Comfort Noise Is A Tool Used Widely In Which Industry?

Trivia

Hard

Video Game Company Activision Was Sued By Which Of These Dictators?

Trivia

Easy

Johnny Carson Once Made A Joke On The Tonight Show That Led To A Shortage Of?

Trivia

Easy

Which Mental Disorder Is Named After A 1990s Movie?