9 Amazing Video Game Developers Killed Off By Their Publishers

Gone too soon.

Dead Space 3
EA

For developers, the fear-inducing visage tucked away under Death's shroud of darkness isn't that of a bleached skeleton, but an ordinary human; balance sheet clutched in one hand, big red marker in the other. If a product flops or the sales numbers don't add up, candidate numero uno for the chopping block is the front line, often through no fault of its own.

Lionhead's collective dream in 2012 was to make Fable 4, a surefire winner with a strong fan base, and yet, Microsoft, seeking to capitalize on the growing popularity of free-to-play, opted to sink $75 million into a risky project (Fable Legends) that its crew had no experience with making. Where's the logic in that?

The very same gross mismanagement and lack of foresight that sunk Lionhead's ship tends to repeat for many of the industry's most tragic casualties, but the explanation need not always be so convoluted. Oftentimes, the answer is as simple as money, or, more precisely, the lack thereof.

Some publishers (hint: the name begins with E and ends with A) are more concerned with generating dollar bills than others, even if it comes at the cost of a world-renowned studio and expert in its field, there are no second chances.

Stay classy, video games.

9. Maxis Emeryville

Dead Space 3
EA

Founded: 1987

Defunct: 2015

What happened: You remember SimCity, right? Maxis Emeryville's God game simulator was considered to be best-in-class for almost two decades, all the way up to its fourth instalment in 2003. Then, all went dark.

Not until 2013, did Maxis finally let loose a long-awaited sequel, but rather than arrive to rapturous applause, the soft reboot was derided for its smaller scope and the requirement to always be online to enjoy any part of it, including single-player.

As you'd expect, it wasn't long after that EA, dissatisfied, put an end to the offshoot studio, relocating various IPs elsewhere within the company.

On paper, that means EA could, at any point, announce a new SimCity game. Has it? Of course, not, and it probably won't be anytime soon, either. According to a former Maxis employee, the reason why a sequel to SimCity 4 took so long was that the series didn't make as much money as The Sims:

"Money. It all comes down to money."
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Joe is a freelance games journalist who, while not spending every waking minute selling himself to websites around the world, spends his free time writing. Most of it makes no sense, but when it does, he treats each article as if it were his Magnum Opus - with varying results.