Troika Closes
Rumors solidify: the RPG specialist is shutting its doors.
by David Adams
February 24, 2005 - After a swirl of rumors that the studio was in its final days, joint CEO Leonard Boyarsky confirmed to fan sites today that Troika has closed.
Fallout fan site No Mutants Allowed today posted a letter from Boyarsky explaining the closure. "As many of you may have already heard, Troika has laid off all of its employees and is closing its doors due to our inability to secure funding for future projects," he writes. "We want to thank all of our fans for their support these past seven years, it has really meant a lot to us that there were people out there who enjoyed our games enough to create fan-sites and follow our progress as a company."
Troika formed in 1998 when Boyarsky, Tim Cain, and Jason Anderson became literal fallout from Interplay, just as Fallout 2 was about to hit. The studio specialized in creating RPG titles based on pen-and-paper systems, including, recently, Vampire: The Masquerade -- Bloodlines and the Dungeons & Dragons-based Temple of Elemental Evil, as well as 2001's classic Arcanum.
Apparently, however, the studio's titles, designed for hard-core RPG enthusiasts, didn't move enough units to keep the company afloat.
It isn't clear yet just what the former Troika trio, or its team, will do next. "We have not yet made the decision as to whether Troika Games as an entity will regroup and pursue future projects or simply cease to exist," writes Boyarsky. He offers particular thanks to his employees: "[We] had the pleasure of working with the some of the most dedicated, hard working, creative people in the industry, and we really appreciate all that they did for Troika."
Bloodlines, Troika's final project, used Valve's advanced Source engine, and was released in November almost simultaneously with the titanic Half-Life 2.
Rumors solidify: the RPG specialist is shutting its doors.
by David Adams
February 24, 2005 - After a swirl of rumors that the studio was in its final days, joint CEO Leonard Boyarsky confirmed to fan sites today that Troika has closed.
Fallout fan site No Mutants Allowed today posted a letter from Boyarsky explaining the closure. "As many of you may have already heard, Troika has laid off all of its employees and is closing its doors due to our inability to secure funding for future projects," he writes. "We want to thank all of our fans for their support these past seven years, it has really meant a lot to us that there were people out there who enjoyed our games enough to create fan-sites and follow our progress as a company."
Troika formed in 1998 when Boyarsky, Tim Cain, and Jason Anderson became literal fallout from Interplay, just as Fallout 2 was about to hit. The studio specialized in creating RPG titles based on pen-and-paper systems, including, recently, Vampire: The Masquerade -- Bloodlines and the Dungeons & Dragons-based Temple of Elemental Evil, as well as 2001's classic Arcanum.
Apparently, however, the studio's titles, designed for hard-core RPG enthusiasts, didn't move enough units to keep the company afloat.
It isn't clear yet just what the former Troika trio, or its team, will do next. "We have not yet made the decision as to whether Troika Games as an entity will regroup and pursue future projects or simply cease to exist," writes Boyarsky. He offers particular thanks to his employees: "[We] had the pleasure of working with the some of the most dedicated, hard working, creative people in the industry, and we really appreciate all that they did for Troika."
Bloodlines, Troika's final project, used Valve's advanced Source engine, and was released in November almost simultaneously with the titanic Half-Life 2.
All I know is that this sucks! These are the guys who came up with fallout, and I really liked their approach to games, unfortunantly it seems like they never had the greatest QA though. I'm not sure about Vampire:Bloodlines, but all of their other games have seemed buggy, made that's what did them in. I hope they get a job at Bethesda working on Fallout 3, now wouldn't that be awesome?!
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