Westwood Studios, Inc.
Moby ID: 65
- Westwood Associates (from 1985 to 1992)
Overview edit · view history
In 1985, Brett W. Sperry and Louis Castle set to work in a garage in Las Vegas. Thus was born Westwood Studios.
Among their early creations are Mars Saga, BattleTech: The Crescent Hawk's Inception, DragonStrike and the first two Eye of the Beholder games, which garnered the young company its first taste of recognition at home and abroad.
In 1992, the company merged with Virgin Interactive Entertainment, which enabled Westwood Studios to become a software publisher in its own right and to use Virgin's worldwide distribution network. It was also the year Westwood released The Legend of Kyrandia and Dune II: The Building of a Dynasty. They would also release the Lands of Lore series of role-playing games as of 1993.
Soon after came Command & Conquer (1995) and Command & Conquer: Red Alert (1996), which set sales records and significantly impacted the RTS genre. Monopoly (1995) was their first commercial game with Internet support, using their proprietary Westwood Online (WOL) system, which their further releases would also use. The company's last adventure game was Blade Runner (1997).
In August 1998, Westwood was acquired by Electronic Arts (EA) for $122.5 million in cash following Virgin Interactive's financial problems, and was joined by another studio previously owned by Virgin, which was then renamed to Westwood Pacific.
Westwood's main branding would regardless be used on games they would outsource to Westwood Pacific or other companies, including Dune 2000 (1998, by Intelligent Games), Recoil (1999, by Zipper Interactive), Sports Car GT (1999, by Westwood Pacific as additional developer for Image Space), and Nox (2000, by Westwood Pacific).
In 1999, Westwood finished the long-awaited games which had suffered development issues: Lands of Lore III in March and Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun in August. In the same year, Brett Sperry pitched Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 to the Pacific studio, becoming the first major game in the series mainly developed by a company other than the main Las Vegas team, although they would contribute the engine, art and audio. The game would release in October 2000.
The final game using Westwood's rights to the Dune license was Emperor: Battle for Dune in 2001, again mainly done by Intelligent Games. Westwood would release their final three games in 2002: Command & Conquer: Renegade, Pirates: The Legend of Black Kat and Earth & Beyond.
Renegade and Earth & Beyond failed to meet Electronic Arts' expectations, so EA liquidated Westwood Studios in March 2003. Those employees that were willing to do so moved to EA Los Angeles' RTS division along with EA Pacific. While some, including Westwood co-founder Louis Castle, accepted, others remained in Las Vegas and founded Petroglyph Games not far from Westwood's office.
Since EA's acquisition, the company had handled a large amount of projects which would never end up released, many in concept stage at the point of cancellation. Known among them were: Swords & Sorcery: Come Devils, Come Darkness (later picked up by Heuristic Park and released as Wizards & Warriors in 2000), iterations of Command & Conquer 3: Incursion, Command & Conquer: Continuum, Command & Conquer: Renegade 2.
Credited on 69 Games from 1986 to 2022
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History +
- March 2003
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The company is closed by EA and all willing staff are absorbed into EA Los Angeles.
- August 17, 1998
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Bought by Electronic Arts from Virgin Interactive for $122,5 million alongside the studio Burst in Irvine, California that was subsequently renamed to Westwood Pacific.
- 1992
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Westwood merges with Virgin Interactive Entertainment enabling Westwood to become a software publisher in its own right and to enjoy Virgin's superior worldwide distribution network
- 1985
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Company founded by Brett Sperry and Louis Castle.
Trivia +
Location and contact information in January 1996:
Westwood Studios
5333 South Arville, Suite 104
Las Vegas, NV 89118-2226
BBS Support: 702-368-2319
Related Web Sites +
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Westwood Studios, Inc.
official site -
Westwood 15th anniversary
A large article on westwood history - speaks both about the past and the future of the company -
Westwood Studios @ Wikipedia
The company profile at Wikipedia -
Westwood Studios, Inc.
archived version of 2000-era Westwood Studios website -
Westwood Studios, Inc.
archived version of 1998-era Westwood Studios website
Frequent Collaborators
Companies- 22 games with Electronic Arts, Inc.
- 17 games with Virgin Interactive Entertainment, Inc.
- 15 games with Avalon Interactive
- 14 games with Strategic Simulations, Inc.
- 12 games with Electronic Arts GmbH
- 12 games with Virgin Interactive Entertainment (Deutschland) GmbH
- 11 games with Electronic Arts Ltd.
- 11 games with Virgin Interactive Entertainment SARL
- 11 games with Electronic Arts Publishing SARL
- 8 games with U.S. Gold Ltd.
- 41 games with Paul S. Mudra
- 38 games with Glenn Sperry
- 37 games with Brett W. Sperry
- 30 games with Frank Klepacki
- 29 games with Dwight Kenichi Okahara
- 28 games with Joseph B. Hewitt IV
- 26 games with Louis J. Castle
- 21 games with Joseph Bostic
- 20 games with Lloyd Bell
- 20 games with Christopher Blevens
Browse Games
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- Developed by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Produced by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Additional Programming by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Ported by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Original Concept by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Additional Graphics by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Cutscenes by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Motion Capture by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Music by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Game Engine by Westwood Studios, Inc.
- Graphic Engine by Westwood Studios, Inc.
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