Company type | Online gaming network |
---|---|
Founded | 1999 |
Defunct | 16 March 2012 |
Headquarters | Dublin , Ireland |
Key people | Dylan Collins |
Jolt Online Gaming was [1] [2] an online gaming company hosted in Ireland. Its main site provided news, reviews, and interviews concerning upcoming games on consoles and computers, while its gaming network Jolt Online Gaming Network hosted and published free-to-play browser-based games. Notable works included Utopia, Utopia Kingdoms, Legends of Zork , and NationStates 2 .
As of 14 March 2012 Jolt's CEO Richard Barnwell announced through the Utopia Kingdoms forum that the company would be closing in the next couple of days:
"It's my job to oversee the Games Studios and all of the people and games within them. So as you can imagine, Utopia Kingdoms has been a big part of my life. It's therefore with disappointment I have to share the news with you that Jolt will be closing down at the end of the week - March 16th 2012."
— Richard Barnwell [3]
Founded in 1999, Jolt Online Gaming was based in Europe, with servers across the US. Jolt was known as one of the pioneers of the supply of rentable servers to online gaming clans. Jolt was acquired by OMAC Industries, a company based in Dublin, Ireland in June 2008. [4] On 8 November 2009 the website Silicon Republic confirmed that GameStop had acquired a stake in Jolt, making a major, undisclosed investment. [5] [6]
The Jolt Online Gaming Network had been noted for releasing browser-based games using the names and fictional worlds of older games or franchises. Their business models often employed micropayment systems, as well as basic banner advertisements.
Championship Manager: Rivals is a football (soccer) game playable through the Facebook [7] website. It was officially released on 1 June 2011 by Jolt Online and developed by Beautiful Game Studios. [8]
The game is the most successful game that Jolt currently has, with a user base of 30,000 monthly active users (MAU). [9] Jolt announced updates including player vs. player gaming, which would allow friend's teams to play against each other. [10]
With the recent changes the company is experiencing (as of 16 March 2012), the future of Championship Manager: Rivals is unknown. The game's forum is down and the company has not specified how the company's closure will affect the game. There are no noticeable changes in-game, and no downtime reported.
Earth: 2025 was a browser-based massive multiplayer internet-based strategy game, originally created and run by Mehul Patel. It was first officially brought online in 1997 and acquired by Jolt through the 2008 sale of Swirve.com to Omac Industries.
In 2008 Jolt acquired this game along with Swirve's Utopia . On 4 November 2009 Jolt announced that they would no longer be continuing the game when the current rounds end in December, citing an over abundance of technical problems which allegedly made continuing support untenable. [11]
Utopia is a browser-based massively multiplayer online role-playing game, originally developed by Mehul Patel and run by Swirve.com. It was first officially brought online in 1998 and acquired by Jolt through the 2008 sale of Swirve.com to OMAC Industries.
In 2009, following repeated denial-of-service attacks on the Utopia servers, Jolt sold the IP to the Dublin-based Scale Front Limited (Sean Blanchfield and Brian McDonnell) and shut down the old game servers. Scale Front relaunched the game at utopia-game.com by the end of the year, after rewriting its code base from scratch with identical gameplay. In February 2017, Blanchfield and McDonnell announced the sale of the game to the Massachusetts-based MUGA Gaming LLC, headed by David Cannata and Jeff Terkowitz. [12]
Utopia Kingdoms is an online strategy game related to the universe of Utopia which was released in early 2009 and originally promoted as a kind of sequel. [13] Utopia Kingdoms allows players to pick a race from the original game and build a kingdom, juggling buildings, resource manufacturing, and high-risk combat. It was made in conjunction with XS Software and is based on their game, Khan Wars. On 16 November 2010 Jolt announced that Utopia Kingdoms would be discontinued after 31 January 2011, citing lack of development resources. [14] Around the same time, Jolt Online who had already been developing a re-release of Utopia Kingdoms game on Facebook, announced it officially on 11 November 2010 on the game's Facebook page. [15] The original official forum announcement was lost due to data failure on or around 21 December 2010, [16] the forum announced a second "welcome" to current Utopia Kingdoms players on 22 December 2010, [17] which was thought to be the "official" release of the game, although it was not. [18]
Jolt Online's CEO Richard Barnwell communicated that the company's closure will not affect Utopia Kingdoms:
I believe so much in the future of the game - I've taken it on personally. Utopia Kingdoms has just become an Indie game! It will remain alive and you can continue to play as you have been. I hope the following questions and answers help explain the situation further.
— Richard Barnwell [3]
Legends of Zork was a casual adventure game that was released in April 2009 [19] that took place in the Zork universe, a text-based adventure game created in the 1980s for the PC. It was released on April Fool's Day 2009, to mixed reviews, with some saying that it had little to do with the original Zork. [20] Other, more recent reviews of the game were more positive, describing later features added to the game "with puzzles that would make the original Zork developers proud." [21] Finally, on 24 May 2011, two years and one month after its release, Jolt Online announced the game closure to players in-game. [22]
Hattrick , a Swedish-based sports game, agreed to allow Jolt to host their game and make it available to more countries including the US, UK, Ireland, and Australia. [23]
Trukz was a text-based game that allowed the player to create a truck driver and simulate the multitude of struggles cargo truck drivers endure on the road, the goal being upgrading their vehicle with commissions earned from the shipping and earning achievements for playing. The game used Google Maps to point out cities they visited or pass on their drives. On 16 November 2010 Jolt announced that Trukz would be discontinued after 31 January 2011, citing lack of development resources. [24]
Playboy Party was a short lived online game released on Facebook around 30 November 2010. [25] [26] The game was released after Jolt failed to launch the long promised Playboy Manager game that they had planned in conjunction with Playboy [27] since 2009. The game consisted in the player being a talent agent managing supermodels in an attempt to beat other agents to a prized spot as a Playboy supermodel. [28] It was announced in May 2009 and garnered media coverage from well-known publications such as The Wall Street Journal and Forbes . [29] The original Playboy Manager website contained the options to pre-register, beta sign-ups [30] and subscription to updates, as well as promotional content. The Playboy Party game in Facebook [31] was poorly managed, requiring a reset that made players start from scratch on March 31, 2011. [32] It was closed six months later on September 12, 2011. [33]
NationStates 2 was a sequel to the popular society simulation game Jennifer Government: NationStates , which lost its authorization [34] after not meeting its contractual obligations to the owner of the original NationStates. NationStates 2 was unpopular next to its predecessor, suffering from technical issues and was later discontinued. After it was taken down, the owner of NationStates, author Max Barry reclaimed the domain and encouraged users to return or try the original version which was "now proudly Jolt-free". [35]
NationStates is a multiplayer government simulation browser game created and developed by Max Barry. Based loosely on Barry's novel Jennifer Government, the game launched on 13 November 2002 with the site originally founded to publicize and promote the novel one week before its release. NationStates continues to promote books written by Barry, but has developed to be a sizable online community, with an accompanying forum board. As of 2 November 2024, over 9 million user-created nations have been created, with 313,834 nations, and 19,040 nations in the world assembly or actively playing.
jMonkeyEngine is an open-source and cross-platform game engine for developing 3D games written in Java. It can be used to write games for Windows, Linux, macOS, Raspberry Pi, Android, and iOS. It uses Lightweight Java Game Library as its default renderer, and also supports another renderer based on Java OpenGL.
Platform Computing was a privately held software company primarily known for its job scheduling product, Load Sharing Facility (LSF). It was founded in 1992 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and headquartered in Markham, Ontario with 11 branch offices across the United States, Europe and Asia.
Planetarion is a browser-based massively multiplayer online game. Created by Fifth Season AS in early 2000, bought by Jolt in 2003, and purchased by Renegade Games in 2009; it is owned by Jagex. The game places players in control of a planet, with the ability to mine its asteroids for resources, enabling them to construct a fleet of spaceships to attack other players' planets. Although its popularity has declined with the emergence of other similar games and the introduction of a pay-to-play model, which has since been changed to a freemium format, the game is active, and as such is one of the oldest running internet games of its genre.
David Doak is a Northern Irish video game designer.
NASCAR 09 is the twelfth simulation installment in the EA Sports NASCAR series and the sequel to 2007 game NASCAR 08. It is developed by EA Tiburon and released on the PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360 in June 2008, and for mobile phones in September of the same year. Jeff Gordon is the cover athlete for NASCAR 09 for the first time since NASCAR 06: Total Team Control. Through the career mode, "Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup", Gordon leads a mentoring program, a new feature offered in NASCAR 09.
EA Bright Light was a British video game developer founded in 1995 by Electronic Arts. The studio was primarily known for its work on licensed franchises such as the video game adaptation of the Harry Potter series. As of 2019, a subsidiary known as EA UK exists, albeit being a publishing operation.
Pocket God is a simulation game developed by Bolt Creative, in which the player manipulates an island and its inhabitants. It was released for the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch on January 9, 2009, and released for Verizon Wireless on September 1, 2010, Android on December 1, 2010, and Windows Phone on December 4, 2010. The Facebook version was released December 23, 2010.
Legends of Zork was a browser-based online adventure game based on the Zork universe created by software company Infocom.
Civilization World was a massively multiplayer online Flash game in the Civilization game series, developed by Sid Meier and Firaxis Games. It was launched on July 6, 2011 on Facebook with the original name Civilization Network; the game title was changed to Civilization World on January 6, 2012. On February 28, 2013, it was announced that the game would be discontinued and was shut down on May 29, 2013.
Heroes of Three Kingdoms is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game set in ancient China during the fall of the Han dynasty. The game, developed by Perfect World, offers free-to-play, no subscription-based game play, and entered Open Beta status on October 16, 2009. The North American version, entitled Heroes of Three Kingdoms, was announced on April 12, 2010, by Perfect World Entertainment, the US subsidiary of Perfect World Co. Heroes of Three Kingdoms entered Closed Beta on July 13, 2010.
RockYou was a company that developed widgets for MySpace and implemented applications for various social networks and Facebook. Since 2014, it has engaged primarily in the purchases of rights to classic video games; it incorporates in-game ads and re-distributes the games.
Playdom was an online social network game developer popular on Facebook, Google+ and Myspace. The company was founded in the San Francisco Bay Area by University of California, Berkeley graduates Ling Xiao and Chris Wang and Swarthmore College graduate Dan Yue. In 2009, the market for games played on social networking sites was valued at $300 million, consisting mostly of online sales of virtual goods.
Kabam is a Canadian video game developer and publisher founded in 2006 and headquartered in Vancouver, with offices in Montreal, San Francisco, and Austin, Texas. The company develops and publishes massively multiplayer social games such as Marvel Contest of Champions and Transformers: Forged to Fight for mobile devices. Before expanding into gaming, Kabam established itself as a social applications developer with focusing on entertainment and sports.
Utopia is a free-to-play massively multiplayer online role-playing browser game that was developed and published by Mehul Patel, under the label of Solaria Interactive, Echelon Entertainment, and Swirve.com. It was released on October 11, 1998. Using real-time strategy gameplay and text-based graphics, it takes place in a fantasy world during intervals of about 10-12 weeks called Ages. Game mechanics change from Age to Age. Generally speaking, individual players manage a principality as part of a larger kingdom with a player serving as the monarch, with the goal of becoming as large as possible by capturing land from other players.
World of the Living Dead(WoTLD) : Resurrection was a real-time zombie survival strategy browser game developed using OpenStreetMap to provide the underlying game world, with in-depth gameplay features to make a browser-based massively multiplayer online role-playing game accessible on desktop, tablet and mobile devices.
Game Jolt is a social community platform for video games, gamers and content creators. Founded by Yaprak and David DeCarmine, it is available on iOS, Android, and on the web and as a desktop app for Windows and Linux. Users share interactive content through a variety of formats including images, videos, live streams, chat rooms, and virtual events.