The Chinese Room co-founder and creative director, Dan Pinchbeck, is leaving the Dear Esther and Everybody's Gone to the Rapture developer after 15 years.
The news comes shortly after the UK studio pulled back the curtain on Still Wakes the Deep, a new horror title that was co-written by Pinchbeck.
Outlining his reasons for leaving, the long-serving boss explained he wants to "see what's out there in the world beyond the studio" after helping to grow the company from "two artists in a bedroom" to a "studio employing over a hundred developers."
"Like for so many other people, we lost friends and family during the pandemic and this has certainly played a part in my decision to see what’s out there in the world beyond the studio I’ve dedicated the last fifteen years to building. It’s been a time of taking stock and considering what ifs," wrote Pinchbeck on the studio blog.
"And so for me, all things have their season, and it’s time for something new. The Chinese Room isn’t two artists in a bedroom anymore, it’s a studio employing over a hundred developers working on multiple, great titles. It’s time to step back and focus on being an artist again–writing, travelling, making. It’s been a wonderful journey and now it’s the start of a new adventure.”
Pinchbeck co-founded The Chinese Room with award-winning composer and Jessica Curry, who stepped away from the studio in 2015 to pursue new projects. In a lengthy open letter announcing her departure, the former co-head added that health issues, strained publisher relationships, and toxicity within the game industry also contributed to her decision.
The Chinese Room was acquired by Sumo Group for an undisclosed fee in 2018. In a blog post published today, the studio thanked both
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