Months after acquiring the rights to the Bubsy games, Atari has put out a call to any indie developer with a pitch for the long dormant series.
In a recent interview with MinnMax, Atari CEO Wade Rosen said that if a smaller studio "wanted to reach out, we'd certainly be interested in hearing those [ideas]." He advised those interested to send their pitch over to Atari via its website.
He further noted that pitches should be "interesting, innovative, and tongue-in-cheek. The last thing anyone wants is a really generic platformer these days. [...] It's an interesting challenge, and someone's going to crack it."
Bubsy was a series of platformers that first began with 1993's Bubsy in Claws Encounters of the Furred Kind for the Sega Genesis and Super NES. After three sequels during the mid and late-90s, the franchise went dormant for over two decades, with the most recent installment being 2019's Bubsy: Paws on Fire.
By his own admission, Rosen acknowledged the mixed-to-negative response to previous Bubsy games puts future installments in an interesting position. "How do you make a great game while also acknowledging that he's been in less than desirable things? Eventually, a good Bubsy game needs to be made."
Outside of Mario and occasionally Sonic, platformers mostly fell out of favor from the late 2000s up to the mid or late 2010s. Indie studios filled in the gap left behind by mascots like Crash Bandicoot and Spyro the Dragon via original properties like Playtonic's Yooka-Laylee and Maddy Makes Games' Celeste.
Meanwhile, veteran mascots were gradually retired by their developers or shut out of their own franchises. Rayman, for example, hasn't starred in his own game since 2013's Rayman Legends; his most recent appearance
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