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PRODUCTS
According to the company's entry on Wikipedia (WP), MicroProse Systems has been divided into two divisions: "Blue" for their consumer electronics and "Red" for its video game and software division. While this has yet to be confirmed or denied by any MPS representative publicly, this supposition is given credence given the colour scheme of its website, logo and byline on that logo as also seen on their website (reproduced farther below). As stated by the company itself, they have an all new line of strategic simulations... on the horizon that are in the same spirit of quality and exciting gameplay that players expect from [MPS]. At the same time, it is also stated -- on the same page of their website no less -- that they are a Video Game accessories and Consumer Electronics products firm and make no mention of software in the same breath. At present MPS' product lineup consists of Digital Television Receiver/Converters, a High Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) switch, cabling for consoles including the PlayStation 3, Wii and Xbox 360, lithium batteries for the PlayStation Portable and three gaming controllers, some of which appear to be compatible with computing platforms including the Macintosh and Linux operating systems. One of MPS' converters received National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) certification on March 3rd of this year. But the road to that certification was rocky and has left some would-be early customers of MicroProse Systems with a bad taste in their mouths.
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But there's more to this story. It has been said that for the roughly two weeks prior to the NTIA alert, MicroProse Systems had been selling the contested 'MPI-500PT' converter in its online store. A user on the AV Science forums published a picture of his MPS converter box that he received, claiming with it that though he ordered a 'MPI-500' he received one of its 'PT' cousins instead. Yet not only does the photo show that the receiver looks like the 'MPI-500' but the box that is also shown in the shot reads "Model MPI-500". In any event, it seems that within a day of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration alert being issued, MPS apparently cancelled those outstanding orders and shut down its online store in response. Beyond redeeming a few of the NTIA-supplied coupons they had received by then, it sounds as though MPS staff donated their own coupons to customers who lost theirs because of the NTIA alert and aftermath.
It looks as though since early July anyway, the NTIA has had the beleagured 'MPI-500PT' converter certified eligible for their coupon program alongside the 'MPI-500'; again, the latter is the model that does not have the same conversion ability. Nearing two months since then, the NTIA categorizes both MPS' converters as not being available for purchase. MicroProse Systems has not re-opened its online store either -- at least, not yet. Taking some recent accounts of availability at face value, these boxes' are set to return to the marketplace September 19th of this year when MPS expects its California-based warehouse to be restocked with units of both models. This facility is likely located at or near the location of the company's reported office in the state city of Mountain View.
PEOPLE
No names behind the MicroProse brand's re-launch efforts have been disclosed by the company on their website, though they themselves collectively state that they are a team of veterans of the video game industry. At the same time, a little digging unearths two names and varying intrigue. The company's domain entry lists the registrant and overall contact as Frederic Chesnais. An individual by the same name has a biography on MobyGames which lists four Atari Inc. titles to his credit including Neverending Nights 2 and its Mask of the Betrayer expansion pack. In the latter most of these, his title is Chief Executive Officer of Atari Interactive Inc. as well as on BattleZone released the year before in 2006. Corroborating this is a number of MPS press releases, including one as recent as mid-June of this year as posted by Reuters, which credits Chesnais as the creator of the Interactive Game Group (I2G)... which incidentally has no known website for itself. The document reads that I2G acquir[es] video games and other interactive entertainment properties and notes that Chesnais is the former Chief Executive Officer of Atari Interactive, Inc with a decade-long experience in acquiring, financing and licensing intellectual property rights in the video game industry.
As for when Chesnais must have left Atari then and under what circumstances, that is proving more difficult for members of the public to narrow down. Buried in an edit record of Wikipedia's main entry on MicroProse is a claim that Chesnais resigned from Atari during the summer of 2007. Credibility to this entry is that the user who input it, Marty Goldberg, has been recognized for his contributions to the online encyclopedia by one of its Senior Editors not once but twice. Further, this Editor has notably contributed to the greater MicoProse discussion as well. A few weeks after this pertinent entry was added to WP in early March of this year, someone using the username 'Microprose' removed that portion of the entry with no reason given. Credit for keeping Goldberg's submission at least somewhat findable online is the News Poster for Strategy Core, Jason "baby arm" Konoske, who cites it in a post of his on its forums. [It's how this amateur investigator came across it.] Keep Goldberg's name in mind as it will appear again later in this article.
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In terms of the average consumer getting ahold of someone at MPS, it has been slow coming since mid-May but that should be about to change. They are to be getting a new phone and help desk support service up and running in late August. (Though a "Dan Kolton" is quoted at this link, there is no reasonable evidence to suggest that he works for MicroProse Systems and can instead be presumed to be quoting a MPS representative he contacted.)
PERSPECTIVES
No products from MicroProse Systems are available in the marketplace... anymore if you want to get technical about it. Yet in listing its game controllers, the company provides pricing and release dates that still read last or this month. Expectation that this MPS will continue the tradition of gaming industry excellence its predecessor was celebrated for is running high, but so is speculation that this will not be the case. The number of curiosities already surrounding its people and products seem to be at best regarded with cautious optimism. The varying shades of the "for" and "against" camps all have arguments to support their cause, though combined they arguably fit more neatly into a holding pattern. That said, the volume of this buzz by analysts and gamers alike has been minimal so far; given the low profile the new MPS has largely kept and there being plenty of other matters to attract the attention of the video and computer gaming audience, this is not necessarily surprising. The National Telecommunications and Information Administration consumer alert, the only such alert the agency has issued on digital converter boxes from any company to date, does not seem to have attracted much attention out of immediate circles in the industry.
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In what is almost a slap in the face... to gamers, [MicroProse] will... make a very crude-looking gamepad/joystick (looking like a relic from 1985) which will surely have gamers lined up around the block. All of these products branded with the once proud [MPS] logo. [..] I seriously wish them success, but I also wish they did not have to tarnish the name of one of the greatest game developers in history to get it. So I ask you, gamers who remember the [MPS] that was: Is it really back?
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Unfortunately, a number of points made in this exposition are based heavily or even solely on accounts by users to the AV Science forum; passionate and at times intriguing, they have unfortunately proven unverifiable by more credible third-parties at present. Not even the Internet Archive Wayback Machine can shed some light on what may or may not have been published on MPS' website in recent months, but hopefully this is temporary and by year's end there will be some illumination to guide the inquisitive eye. For the ears, a ditty of sorts: their website is powered by Flash and if your World Wide Web browser supports the technology, is enabled and your speakers are on and working, you should be able to hear a brief but base-intensive chord upon loading.
For better or for worse, the MicroProse name now lives on in MicroProse Systems. It has big shoes to fill.
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