Sierra On-Line
From Sega Retro
Sierra On-Line | ||||
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Founded: 1979 (as On-Line Systems) | ||||
Merged into: Activision (2008) | ||||
Headquarters:
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Sierra On-Line was a US video game developer and publisher.
Contents
History
The company was founded as On-Line Systems in 1979, changing its name to Sierra On-Line after a move from Los Angeles to Oakhurst, California[2] in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. It saw successes in the 1980s with its line of computer adventure games, expanding and going public in 1989[2].
Sierra acquired a number of software companies in the following decade, notably Dynamix in 1990[2], becoming a worldwide publisher. They additionally operated an internal development team named PyroTechnix.
The company was acquired by CUC International in 1996, which itself merged with HFS Incorporated in December 1997 to become Cendant Corporation. It was at this time when significant accounting fraud at CUC was uncovered, with Cendant subsequently selling its software division to the Paris-based Havas S.A.. Sierra subsequently became a part of Havas Interactive, laid of much of its development staff and became purely a sofware publisher. The company would change its name to Sierra Entertainment in 2002.
After a series of mergers in 2000, Sierra's parent company, Havas S.A. became Vivendi Universal Publishing. A series of unsuccessful products saw more cost-cutting and redundancies Sierra, and the company became little more than a brand for Vivendi. 2008 saw Vivendi merge with Activision to form the holding company Activision Blizzard, and Sierra was closed in the months which followed, with many of its IP rights being sold to third-parties.
Activision briefly brought back the Sierra name in 2014 to re-release older Sierra titles and some independently-developed games, but is otherwise unrelated to the original Sierra On-Line.
Softography
Master System
Mega-CD
- Bouncers (1994)
- King's Quest V (unreleased)
- Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge Lizards (unreleased)
- Mixed-Up Mother Goose (unreleased)
- Police Quest III: The Kindred (unreleased)
- Space Quest IV: Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers (unreleased)
- Stellar 7 (unreleased)
- The Incredible Toons Machine (unreleased)
Saturn
- Phantasm (1997)
- 3D Ultra Pinball (unreleased)
- The Last Dynasty (unreleased)
Dreamcast
- Hoyle Casino (2000)
- Maximum Pool (2000)
- Half-Life (unreleased)
- Sierra Sports Game Room (unreleased)
- SWAT 3: Close Quarters Battle (unreleased)
Atari 8-bit family
- Frogger (1982)
Apple II
- Frogger (1983)
Commodore 64
- Frogger (1983)
IBM PC
- Frogger (1983)
References
- ↑ E3 2001 Directory, page 104
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 http://www.sierra.com/corp/info/history/content.html (Wayback Machine: 2000-03-02 13:13)