Atari has announced it has reached an agreement to buy Digital Eclipse, a studio based in Emeryville, California that specialises in «digital restoration of classic games.» The move follows Atari's acquisition of Nightdive Studios in May this year, another studio with a retro focus that most recently developed the System Shock remake, and is all part of what the press release calls Atari's «retro-focused growth strategy.»
Well it makes a lot more sense than Atari hotels, at least. Digital Eclipse was a pioneer in commercial videogame emulation and recent projects from the studio include Street Fighter: 30th Anniversary, Mega Man Legacy Collection, SNK 40th Anniversary Collection, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Cowabunga Collection, and Disney Classic Games Collection, which collectively «sold millions of units». Its most recent projects include the excellent Atari 50: The Anniversary Collection, the well-received The Making of Karateka, and the remake of Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord, which is currently in Early Access.
«Digital Eclipse is the best in the world at what they do,» said Wade Rosen, chairman and CEO of Atari. «They have a deep love and respect for the history of the games industry, and are renowned for developing critically acclaimed projects based on historic franchises. Digital Eclipse, along with Nightdive, are in perfect alignment with Atari’s DNA and renewed purpose.»
Mike Mika, president and creative director of Digital Eclipse, said, «Our experience collaborating on Atari 50: The Anniversary Celebration was revelatory. The trust that Atari showed our team, and our clear mutual love and respect for the content, positioned us to produce something truly remarkable. I know Atari will
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