Mediatonic

Last updated

Mediatonic Limited
Company type Subsidiary
Industry Video games
FoundedSeptember 2005;19 years ago (2005-09) in Uxbridge, England
Founders
  • Dave Bailey
  • Paul Croft
Headquarters,
England
Key people
  • Dave Bailey (CEO)
  • Paul Croft (CGO)
Products
Number of employees
230 (2020)
Parent Tonic Games Group (2020–present)
Website mediatonicgames.com

Mediatonic Limited is a British video game developer based in London. The company was founded in September 2005 by Brunel University students Dave Bailey and Paul Croft, releasing their first game, Snowman Salvage in December that year. Initially a work-for-hire studio for Flash games, Mediatonic has developed original games for other platforms, including Murder by Numbers and Fall Guys . As of June 2020, Mediatonic employs 230 people in four studios and is part of Tonic Games Group, which is a subsidiary of Epic Games since March 2021.

Contents

History

Mediatonic was founded in September 2005 by friends Dave Bailey and Paul Croft, both aged 21 at the time, during their final year at Brunel University. [1] [2] They decided on the opening in a drunken conversation at the university's student union bar. [3] With an office near the campus, they set up the company as a work-for-hire studio to create Flash games and sometimes skipped lectures to accept calls from clients. [2] [4] Snowman Salvage, a game that was part of Croft's dissertation, was Mediatonic's first release in December 2005. [1] [4]

PopCap Games, Big Fish Games and PlayFirst were early Mediatonic clients and, among others, Mediatonic produced Flash conversions of Bejeweled , Bookworm , Diner Dash and Poppit!. It also created Amateur Surgeon, an original game, for Adult Swim Games. [2] [3] [4] Mediatonic was profitable enough in its first year that, following Bailey and Croft's graduation, the studio moved to a former government building in Westminster in February 2006 and hired ten employees. [1] [2] Other early games by Mediatonic included Meowcenaries, Gigolo Assassin, Must Eat Birds, and Monsters (Probably) Stole My Princess. [5] Having reached 25 employees, Mediatonic moved to new offices near Covent Garden in February 2008. [1]

In July 2009, Mediatonic opened a studio in Brighton to act as a digital media agency, later spun out into a company named Graphite. [1] Mediatonic received funding from entrepreneurs Kelly Sumner, Ian Livingstone and Geoff Heath in April 2010, and from Frog Capital in January 2012. [1] Pete Hickman, a former executive producer for Eidos Interactive, joined Mediatonic as its head of production in July 2011. [6] [7] Planning to double its 50-strong headcount, Mediatonic moved its London headquarters to Soho in May 2012. [1] [8] Mediatonic opened a Brighton development studio that October. [9] According to Bailey, Mediatonic began giving original games and work-for-hire projects equal weight and the company grew as a result. [10] It later branched out into publishing, opening The Irregular Corporation as a sister company in December 2015. [1] [10]

Mediatonic moved into Shell Mex House, London, in April 2017. [1] In July, a five-person team was established in a co-working space in Madrid, and expanded into a proper office in July 2019. [1] [11] A sister development studio, Fortitude Games, was established in Guildford in 2018. [4] Frog Capital sold its share in Mediatonic to Synova Capital, making a 7.4-times return on its investment. [12] A fourth studio for Mediatonic in Leamington Spa was announced in February 2020. [13] Also in early 2020, Mediatonic established its headquarters in an office above London Victoria station, although it went largely unused due to the COVID-19 pandemic causing the company to make employees work from home. [10]

Bailey and Croft established Tonic Games Group as a parent company for Mediatonic, The Irregular Corporation, and Fortitude Games, moving 35 employees to Tonic Games Group, while Mediatonic had a staff of 230. [4] [10] On 2 March 2021, Epic Games announced that it had acquired Tonic Games Group, including Mediatonic. [14] In September 2023, Mediatonic was subjected to deep job cuts by its parent company. Though it was first speculated that the entire studio had been closed, that proved not to be the case. [15]

Games developed

YearTitlePublisherPlatform(s)
2005Snowman Salvage Shockwave Web
Beetle BompiWinWeb
2006Air Control Lufthansa Web
2007Lego Pirates: Quest for Brickbeard's Bounty The Lego Group Web
Operation Challenge Pogo.com Web
Mystery Case Files: Millionheir Nintendo Web
PlaySega Blackjack Sega Web
Mah Jong Amazon Adventure Sega Web
Brain Assist! Sega Web
Letter Linker Sega Web
Addiction Solitaire Shockwave Web
Tequila Trouble William Grant & Sons Web
Mole Hunt Pogo.com Web
Homerun Hero Shockwave Web
Horizon AstraZeneca Web
SiteAdvisor Challenge McAfee Web
Diamond Detective Gamehouse Web
Battleships! Sega Web
Meat Match Boonty Web
Bubble Bubble Sega Web
Super Collapse! Gamehouse Web
Little Shop of Treasures Gamehouse Web
2008Turbo Solitaire Sega Web
Text Twist Sega Web
Sudoku Sega Web
Greedy GangMediatonicWeb
Portal Peril Nickelodeon Web
Penguin PanicMediatonicWeb
Word Whomp Mini Pogo.com Web
Poppit! Mini Stressbuster Pogo.com Web
Poppit! Stressbuster Pogo.com Web
Bookworm PopCap Games Web
Bejeweled 2 PopCap Games Web
Diner Dash PlayFirst Web
Bejeweled 2 PopCap Games Web
Inca QuestiWinWeb
Talismania PopCap Games Web
Manor Mystery Boonty Web
Gigolo Assassin Adult Swim Web
Aquatic Word Burst Sega Web
Ice Shuffle Sega Web
Greek Island Solitaire Sega Web
Beijing 2008, High Dive Sega Web
Beijing 2008, Archery Sega Web
Beijing 2008, Weightlifting Sega Web
Hidden Expedition Titanic Big Fish Games Web
Bureaucracy Buster AstraZeneca Web
Amateur Surgeon Adult Swim Web, iOS
Trivial Pursuit Quiz Electronic Arts Web
Crestor Challenge AstraZeneca Web
Travelogue 360 Rome Big Fish Games Web
Azada Big Fish Games Web
Sonic at the Olympic Games Sega Web
Music, Melodies and Rockstars Sega Web
The Quiz of Culinary Delights Sega Web
Back to the 80s Quiz Sega Web
Hollywood Adventure Quiz Sega Web
Three Reel Slots Sega Web
Columns Sega Web
Sega Pool Sega Web
2009Commanders Sierra Entertainment Web
Diego's Underwater Adventures Nickelodeon Web
Dr. Kawashima's Brain Training 2 Namco Bandai Games Feature Phones
Dr. Kawashima's Brain Exercise, Line Up Namco Bandai Games Web
Dr. Kawashima's Brain Exercise, Reverse Dice Namco Bandai Games Web
Dr. Kawashima's Brain Exercise, Follow the Pencil Namco Bandai Games Web
Dr. Kawashima's Brain Exercise, Predominant Number Namco Bandai Games Web
Hidden Expedition Titanic Big Fish Games Web
Hidden Expedition Titanic MSN Search Special Big Fish Games Web
Hidden Expedition Everest MSN Search Special Big Fish Games Web
Hidden Expedition Everest Big Fish Games Web
Travelogue 360 London Big Fish Games Web
Travelogue 360 Paris Big Fish Games Web
Amateur Surgeon Christmas Adult Swim Web, iOS
Fast & Furious Sierra Entertainment Facebook, Myspace
SpongeBob SquarePants: Hooked on You Nickelodeon Web
Sonic Level Creator Sega Web
SteamweaversMediatonicMyspace
Toy Story: Woody's Great Escape Pixar Web
Suite Life on Deck: Smoothie Service Disney Web
Kid Vs. Kat: Katapult Katastrophe Disney Web
Biker Blast-Off! The Gadget Show iOS
Meowcenaries Adult Swim Web, iOS
Extreme Lawn BowlsMediatonicWeb
Must.Eat.BirdsMediatoniciOS, Android
2010Amateur Surgeon 2 Adult Swim Web, iOS, Android
Vancouver 2010, Slalom Sega Web
Vancouver 2010, Ski Jump Sega Web
Vancouver 2010, Speed Skating Sega Web
Vancouver 2010, Snowboarding Sega Web
Moshling Boshling Mind Candy Web
Boom Bandits Spil Games Web
Who's That Flying?! MediatoniciOS, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation Portable, PlayStation 3
Monsters (Probably) Stole My Princess MediatonicPlayStation Portable, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
MicroGPMediatonicFacebook
Pirate KingMediatonicFacebook
Ocean SnapperMediatonicMyspace, Facebook
Back to the Future: Blitz Through Time Telltale Games Facebook, Online
2011 1000 Tiny Claws MediatonicPlayStation Portable, PlayStation 3
Amateur Ninja Adult Swim Web
Thundercats: Tree of the Ancients Warner Bros. Web
2012Robot Unicorn Attack: Evolution Adult Swim Facebook
Amateur Surgeon Hospital Adult Swim Facebook
Superbia Disney Web
2013Moshi Monsters: Lost Islands GREE iOS
Qwirkle Square Enix iOS, Android, Facebook
Foul Play Devolver Digital Xbox Live Arcade, Steam, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita
Amateur Surgeon 3: Tag Team Trauma Adult Swim iOS, Android
2014Delivery Outlaw Adult Swim iOS
Secrets and Treasure Microsoft Studios Windows 8
Hatoful Boyfriend Devolver Digital Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita
2015Heavenstrike Rivals Square Enix Android, iOS, Microsoft Windows
Hatoful Boyfriend: Holiday Star Devolver Digital Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita
2016Bounty Stars DeNA West Android, iOS
Fantastic Beasts: Cases from the Wizarding World WB Games Android, iOS
2017New Yahtzee with Buddies Scopely Android, iOS
2018 Fable Fortune Microsoft Studios Microsoft Windows, Xbox One
2019 Gears Pop! Xbox Game Studios Android, iOS
2020 Murder by Numbers The Irregular Corporation Nintendo Switch, Microsoft Windows
Fall Guys Devolver Digital, Epic Games Microsoft Windows, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ion Storm</span> American video game developer

Ion Storm, L.P. was an American video game developer founded by John Romero and Tom Hall, both formerly of id Software. Despite an impressive pedigree and high expectations, the company only produced one commercial and critical success, 2000's Deus Ex.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Epic Games</span> American video game company

Epic Games, Inc. is an American video game and software developer and publisher based in Cary, North Carolina. The company was founded by Tim Sweeney as Potomac Computer Systems in 1991, originally located in his parents' house in Potomac, Maryland. Following its first commercial video game release, ZZT (1991), the company became Epic MegaGames, Inc. in early 1992 and brought on Mark Rein, who has been its vice president since. After moving the headquarters to Cary in 1999, the studio changed its name to Epic Games.

IO Interactive A/S (IOI) is a Danish video game developer based in Copenhagen, best known for creating and developing the Hitman and Kane and Lynch franchises. IO Interactive's most recent game is Hitman 3, which was released in January 2021.

Crystal Dynamics, Inc. is an American video game developer based in San Mateo, California. The studio is best known for its games in the Tomb Raider, Legacy of Kain, and Gex series.

Eidos Interactive Limited was a British video game publisher based in Wimbledon, London. Among its notable franchises were Championship Manager, Deus Ex, Hitman, Thief, and Tomb Raider. Domark was founded by Mark Strachan and Dominic Wheatley in 1984. In 1995, it was acquired by software company Eidos. Ian Livingstone, who held a stake in Domark, became executive chairman of Eidos and held various roles including creative director. Eidos took over U.S. Gold in 1996, which included developer Core Design, and merged its operations including Domark, which created publishing subsidiary Eidos Interactive. The company acquired Crystal Dynamics in 1998, and owned numerous other assets. In 2005, parent Eidos was taken over by games publisher SCi. The combined company, SCi Entertainment Group, which was briefly renamed Eidos, was itself taken over by Square Enix in 2009.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Toby Gard</span> English video game character designer

Toby Gard is an English video game character designer and consultant. He was part of the team that created fictional female British archaeologist Lara Croft. Lara Croft was awarded a Guinness World Record recognizing her as the "most successful human video game heroine".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Core Design</span> Former British video game developer

Core Design Limited was a British video game developer based in Derby. Founded in May 1988 by former Gremlin Graphics employees, it originally bore the name Megabrite until rebranding as Core Design in October the same year. The company was acquired by umbrella company CentreGold in December 1994, which in turn was acquired by Eidos Interactive in April 1996. In May 2006, the Core Design personnel and assets were acquired by Rebellion Developments, and the company became Rebellion Derby, which was then shut down in March 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SCi Games</span> British video game publisher

SCi Entertainment Group plc was a British video game publisher based in London. The company was founded in 1988 by Jane Cavanagh and floated on the stock exchange in 1996. In May 2005, SCi acquired Eidos plc, the parent company of publisher Eidos Interactive, and merged their operations by June 2006. In December 2008, SCi was briefly renamed Eidos and was subsequently acquired by Square Enix in March 2009.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Warner Bros. Games</span> American video game publisher

Warner Bros. Games is an American video game publisher based in Burbank, California, and part of the Global Streaming and Interactive Entertainment unit of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD). The publisher was founded as Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment on January 14, 2004, under Warner Bros. Entertainment and transferred to its Home Entertainment division when that company was formed in October 2005. Warner Bros. Games manages the wholly owned game development studios TT Games, Rocksteady Studios, NetherRealm Studios, Monolith Productions, WB Games Boston, Avalanche Software, WB Games Montréal and Player First Games, among others.

<i>Urban Chaos: Riot Response</i> 2006 video game

Urban Chaos: Riot Response is a first-person shooter video game developed by British games developer Rocksteady Studios and published by Eidos Interactive for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox. The game was released in May 2006 in Europe and June 2006 in North America. It is Rocksteady Studios' debut game and, as of 2024, the only game by the developer to not be based on a DC Comics property as well as their only title to not receive a PC release.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">People Can Fly</span> Polish video game developer

People Can Fly is a Polish video game developer based in Warsaw. The studio was founded in February 2002 by Adrian Chmielarz, previously the co-founder of Metropolis Software, together with acquaintances Michał Kosieradzki and Andrzej Poznański. The studio's first game was Painkiller (2004). Its success led to a deal with THQ for the game Come Midnight, which allowed the studio to expand. After the game was cancelled, People Can Fly found itself in financial trouble. Epic Games acquired a majority share in People Can Fly in August 2007 and collaborated with the studio on projects such as Bulletstorm (2011) and Gears of War: Judgment (2013).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Reto-Moto</span> Danish video game developer

Reto-Moto ApS was a Danish video game developer based in Copenhagen. Founded in 1997, its staff formed IO Interactive as a joint venture in September 1998. Following a decade of inactivity, some founders reformed Reto-Moto in April 2008, and the company developed Heroes & Generals, which was released in September 2016.

Rocksteady Studios Limited is a British video game developer based in London. Founded on 13 December 2004, the studio is best known for its work in the Batman: Arkham series. The company is a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kalypso Media</span> German video game publisher

Kalypso Media Group is a German video game developer and publisher. Founded in 2006 in Worms, the group includes four companies, in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States and has studios, Realmforge Studios, Gaming Minds Studios, Claymore Game Studios, and Nine Worlds Studios. Kalypso is best known for publishing Tropico, Sudden Strike, Dungeons and Railway Empire series.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eidos-Montréal</span> Canadian video game developer

Eidos Interactive Corporation is a Canadian video game developer based in Montreal and part of Embracer Group. The studio was founded by Stéphane D'Astous in 2007 under SCi Entertainment. It became part of Square Enix Europe in 2009 and CDE Entertainment in 2022.

Virtuos is a video game development company headquartered in Singapore with studios across Asia, Europe, and North America. Virtuos specializes in game development and art production for AAA consoles, PC, and mobile titles – working as an external developer for other companies.

Team17 Group plc is a British video game developer and publisher based in Wakefield, England. The venture was created in December 1990 through the merger of British publisher 17-Bit Software and Swedish developer Team 7. At the time, the two companies consisted of and were led by Michael Robinson, Martyn Brown and Debbie Bestwick, and Andreas Tadic, Rico Holmes and Peter Tuleby, respectively. Bestwick later became Team17's chief executive officer until 1 January 2024. After their first game, Full Contact (1991) for the Amiga, the studio followed up with multiple number-one releases on that platform and saw major success with Andy Davidson's Worms in 1995, the resulting franchise of which still remains as the company's primary development output, having developed over 20 entries in it.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Square Enix Montreal</span> Canadian video game developer

Square Enix Montréal was a Canadian video game developer based in Montreal. It created the Go series of turn-based puzzle games for mobile devices based on former Eidos Interactive intellectual properties.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">TT Games</span> British holding company

TT Games Limited is a British holding company and a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Games. The company was established in 2005 through the merger of developer Traveller's Tales and publisher Giant Interactive. Its other branches include developer TT Fusion, animation studio TT Animation and mobile game studio TT Odyssey. The company is best known for its video games based on the Lego construction toy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hangar 13</span> American video game developer

Hangar 13 is an American video game developer based in Novato, California, in the area of the former Hamilton Air Force Base. Established with Haden Blackman in December 2014 as a division of 2K, the company's debut game was Mafia III, released in October 2016. In 2017, 2K Czech was merged into Hangar 13, wherefore the studio received two additional studios in Brno and Prague; another studio was opened in Brighton in 2018. Their second title, Mafia: Definitive Edition, was released in September 2020. Their third title, TopSpin 2K25, was released in April 2024.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Company". Mediatonic. 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Parkin, Simon (8 October 2010). "From Flash To Minis: Mediatonic On Creating Tiny Wonders". Gamasutra .
  3. 1 2 Edge Staff (30 September 2010). "Mediatonic's Rise". Edge . Archived from the original on 3 April 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Takahashi, Dean (18 June 2020). "Tonic Games Group will manage multiple game studios and publishing operations". VentureBeat .
  5. Edge Staff (30 September 2010). "Mediatonic's Rise – Page 2 of 2". Edge . Archived from the original on 18 June 2013.
  6. Orland, Kyle (11 July 2011). "Eidos' Pete Hickman Joins Mediatonic As Head Of Production". Gamasutra .
  7. Weber, Rachel (11 July 2011). "Eidos exec producer joins Mediatonic". GamesIndustry.biz .
  8. Weber, Rachel (2 April 2012). "Mediatonic planning to double headcount". GamesIndustry.biz .
  9. Weber, Rachel (2 October 2012). "New Brighton studio for Mediatonic". GamesIndustry.biz .
  10. 1 2 3 4 Wallace, Chris (18 June 2020). "Mediatonic launches 300-strong Tonic Games Group – "It means that we can all be much more resilient and stand the test of time"". MCV/Develop .
  11. Batchelor, James (8 July 2019). "Mediatonic opens new Spanish studio". GamesIndustry.biz .
  12. Reid, Mike (6 June 2019). "7.4 x return on the sale of Frog's stake in Mediatonic". Frog Capital.
  13. Kerr, Chris (3 February 2020). "Fall Guys developer Mediatonic to open new UK studio". Gamasutra .
  14. Bankhurst, Adam (2 March 2021). "Epic Games Has Acquired Fall Guys Developer Mediatonic". IGN . Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  15. Phillips, Tom (29 September 2023). "Fall Guys developer hit hard by Epic Games layoffs, but studio to remain open". Eurogamer.net. Retrieved 3 March 2024.