Imagine Software

Last updated

Imagine Software
Industry Video games
Founded17 September 1982;41 years ago (1982-09-17)
Founders
  • Mark Butler
  • David Lawson
Defunct9 July 1984;39 years ago (1984-07-09) [1]
FateBankrupt
Successor
Headquarters,
Area served
United Kingdom
Key people
  • Ian Hetherington
  • David Lawson
  • Mark Butler
  • Bruce Everiss
Products Computer games
Number of employees
80 [3]

Imagine Software was a British video games developer based in Liverpool which existed briefly in the early 1980s, initially producing software for the ZX Spectrum and VIC-20. The company rose quickly to prominence and was noted for its polished, high-budget approach to packaging and advertising (at a time when this was not commonplace in the British software industry), as well as its self-promotion and ambition.

Contents

Following Imagine's high-profile demise under mounting debts in 1984, the name was bought and used as a label by Ocean Software until the late 1980s.

History

Founding and early success

Imagine Software was founded in 1982 by former members of Bug-Byte Mark Butler and David Lawson. Butler and programmer Eugene Evans had previously worked at Microdigital, one of the first computer stores in the UK. [4] The owner of Microdigital, Bruce Everiss, was invited to join the company to run the company day-to-day and run the PR department. [5] Imagine Software produced several very successful games, including Arcadia [4] for the Vic 20 and ZX Spectrum, throughout 1982 and 1983, but some games shipped with serious, game-breaking bugs. The company grew in size through this period, at one point employing upwards of 80 people, a large number for its time, and splashed out large sums of money on company cars and the founding of a racing team to race in the Isle of Man TT race. [6]

Financial troubles and demise

Rumours of Imagine's financial situation began to circulate in December 1983 following the revelations that an estimated £50,000 of its advertising bills had not been paid. [7] The following year the debts mounted, with further advertising and tape duplication bills going unpaid, and Imagine was forced to sell the rights to its games to Beau Jolly in order to raise money. The company then achieved nationwide notoriety when it was filmed the following year by a BBC documentary crew while in the process of going spectacularly bust. [4] Mark Butler also made an appearance on Thames Television's Daytime programme in 1984, talking about his experience of having been a millionaire who lost his money at a young age.

On 28 June 1984 a writ was issued against Imagine by VNU Business Press for money owed for advertising in Personal Computer Games magazine, and the company was wound up on 9 July 1984 at the High Court in London after it was unable to raise the £10,000 required to pay this debt (though by this time its total debts ran to hundreds of thousands of pounds). [1] [3]

Legacy

Former programmers went on to establish Psygnosis and Denton Designs. [4] The company's back catalogue was owned by Beau Jolly, who in turn later sold those rights to Subvert, while rights to the Imagine label were acquired by Ocean Software, which primarily used it to publish home computer conversions of popular arcade games.

In other media

The Black Mirror interactive film Bandersnatch , released in 2018, alludes to Imagine Software and the failed work to produce Bandersnatch. The film starts on 9 July 1984, the date of Imagine's closure, and includes a shot of the cover of Crash reporting on the closure. Within the film, the fictional software company Tuckersoft, which had developed both Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum games, places its financial future on the attempt to produce Bandersnatch, and in some scenarios falls into bankruptcy after the game fails to appear. [8] [9]

Megagames

Imagine had intended to develop six so-called "Megagames", the most well-known of which were Psyclapse and Bandersnatch. These games were designed to push the boundaries of the hardware of the time, even to the extent that they were intended to be released with a hardware add-on which would have increased the capabilities of the computer, as well as guarding against piracy. The games were advertised heavily and would have retailed at around £30 – an expensive price tag when the average price of a game at the time was £7.20 – but Imagine's collapse meant that they remained vaporware and never saw the light of day. [4] [10] [11]

During the BBC documentary it was revealed that Psyclapse was little more than a paper sketch, [4] though the name was later used for a sub-label of Psygnosis. [12] Most of the concepts originally intended for Bandersnatch eventually appeared in another Psygnosis game, Brataccas , for the 16-bit Atari ST, Amiga and Macintosh computers. [13]

Games

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References

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  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kean, Roger (December 1984). "The Biggest Commercial Break of Them All". Crash . Newsfield Publications Ltd. Archived from the original on 5 January 2019. Retrieved 17 December 2008.
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  12. "Psygnosis History". Archived from the original on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 1 January 2015. Psyclapse was actually the name of a Commodore 64 game that was never released [but] was to live on as a division of Psygnosis.
  13. "The Making Of: Bandersnatch". Edge. 4 September 2009. Archived from the original on 2 January 2015.
  14. "Your Spectrum 09 - Joystick Jury".