Difference between revisions of "Distinctive Software"

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(summary rewrite and expansion, softography expansion, added date of founding, reference)
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{{sub-stub}}'''Distinctive Software Inc.''' was a video game developer active during the late 1980s and early 1990s founded by future [[Electronic Arts]] and [[Microsoft]] executive, Don Mattrick. Its porting division, established in 1988, was '''Unlimited Software Inc.'''. It produced the DOS versions of several [[Sega]] arcade games for [[Activision]]. It became '''Electronic Arts Canada''' in 1991 after being bought by EA. Some of its staff would later become part of [[Extended Play Productions]], another EA subsidiary.
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{{sub-stub}}'''Distinctive Software Inc.''' was a Canadian video game developer active during the late 1980s and early 1990s, founded by future [[Electronic Arts]] and [[Microsoft]] executive [[wikipedia:Don Mattrick|Don Mattrick]]. Known for their [[wikipedia:Test Drive (series)|Test Drive series]] of racing games, the company also ran a successful [[wikipedia:Porting#Porting of video games|game porting]] sub-label named '''Unlimited Software Inc.''', which produced the [[wikipedia:MS-DOS|MS-DOS]] versions of several [[Activision]]-published [[Sega]] arcade games.
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In 1991, the company was acquired by American video game developer [[Electronic Arts]] in a deal worth $10 million and became [[EA Canada]].{{ref|https://www.nytimes.com/1991/06/18/business/company-news-electronic-arts-to-buy-distinctive.html}} Two years later, an internal development team dedicated to the production of [[Electronic Arts]] sports games was founded under the name [[Extended Play Productions]].
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==
{{CompanyHistoryAll|Distinctive Software|Unlimited Software|Electronic Arts Canada|EA Canada}}
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{{CompanyHistoryAll|Distinctive Software|Unlimited Software|Electronic Arts Canada|EA Canada|DSI}}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 19:30, 13 June 2021

https://retrocdn.net/images/3/30/DistinctiveSoftware_logo.png

DistinctiveSoftware logo.png
Distinctive Software
Founded: 1982
Merged into: Electronic Arts (1991)
Headquarters:
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

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Distinctive Software Inc. was a Canadian video game developer active during the late 1980s and early 1990s, founded by future Electronic Arts and Microsoft executive Don Mattrick. Known for their Test Drive series of racing games, the company also ran a successful game porting sub-label named Unlimited Software Inc., which produced the MS-DOS versions of several Activision-published Sega arcade games.

In 1991, the company was acquired by American video game developer Electronic Arts in a deal worth $10 million and became EA Canada.[1] Two years later, an internal development team dedicated to the production of Electronic Arts sports games was founded under the name Extended Play Productions.

Softography

Mega Drive

Game Gear

IBM PC

Saturn

Dreamcast

  • SSX (unreleased) (as EA Canada)

References