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created Dallas' Game Industry
on 04-07-2009 04:03 PM
I read this in the Dallas Morning News this past Sunday. Talks about closing down of Ensemble, the creation of a few new studios in the Plano area, some other interesting stuff.
http://www.guidelive.com/sharedconte...s.3b84ec9.html
Quote:
Plano, area cities looking to video game industry for jobs
02:00 PM CDT on Saturday, April 4, 2009
By THEODORE KIM / The Dallas Morning News
tkim@dallasnews.com In a mundane Plano office park, video game start-up Robot Entertainment is quietly hatching the next world conquest or wizard hero or space battle.
"Here we are plopped in the suburbs, and we meet people all the time who are like, 'You created Halo Wars?' " said Patrick Hudson, the firm's vice president of operations, referring to the hit game franchise.
Plano and its neighbors have long labored to till a miniature Silicon Valley on the North Texas prairie. The goal: Draw the jobs and tax dollars of a trade that has evolved from geek-prone garage pastime to billion-dollar business.
Many still regard the Dallas area as an outpost compared with other U.S. gaming hubs such as San Francisco, Seattle and even Austin.
But with the changing economic winds stoking brushfires of entrepreneurship within the industry, communities starved for job growth are now looking to capitalize.
"We have an emerging cluster here. I think we have a strong shot of creating some muscle," said Sally Bane, executive director of Plano's economic development board.
The modern industry took root in North Texas in the 1990s, when Mesquite's id Software struck it rich with the blockbuster games Doom and Quake.
North Texas is now home to a collection of firms, including Plano's Gearbox Software, one of the nation's largest independent game developers. Across Texas, video gaming constitutes an industry worth more than $400 million that employs about 7,600 people, according to the Entertainment Software Association.
Figures like those are alluring to cities like Plano, which faces a slowdown in home building and a budget deficit at City Hall. Attracting tech firms, which offer the promise of high-dollar jobs and tax dollars, is a surefire avenue toward new growth.
Economic-development officials have tried to build on the region's gaming success, as well as leverage the presence of a graduate-level game design program at Southern Methodist University's Plano campus.
Tech expansion
Progress has come in fits and starts.
Plano's efforts appeared to pay off last year when the city, with the help of cash grants and tax breaks, lured Microsoft's Ensemble Studios away from Dallas to a prime office atop the Shops at Legacy. That deal fell through in September when Microsoft announced it would be closing Ensemble, best known for crafting Age of Empires and Halo Wars.
Yet amid the studio's breakup are traces of the plucky overnight entrepreneurship that has helped define California's Silicon Valley.
No fewer than four local start-up firms have sprouted from Ensemble's ashes, including Robot Entertainment. The others are Bonfire Studios, Windstorm Studios and Newtoy, a firm founded by two brothers that has created a successful iPhone chess game.
Flashes in the pan? Perhaps. But those behind the fledgling companies say their efforts could herald a fresh round of independent tech expansion in a region synonymous with oil, real estate and other industries.
That would be welcome news for many cities weighed down recently by job losses and stagnant home values.
"There's just so much room for growth," said Dusty Monk, a former Ensemble programmer who recently launched Windstorm Studios. "I think we're on the brink of a gaming renaissance here."
He then joked, "I guess I'll find out in the next six months."
Courting newcomers
The competition to land the new firms has already intensified.
David Rippy, a founder of Bonfire Studios, said officials from several communities, including Plano and Allen, courted the start-up in earnest.
The firm decided to stay in the same Dallas high-rise as Ensemble, in part to save on moving costs.
Higher stakes aside, game developers are still drawn to the campy, garage appeal of days past.
Rippy and his colleagues decided on the name Bonfire to evoke a circle of gamers chatting around a campfire.
"We originally were thinking Campfire. But we wanted it to be something bigger," said Bill Jackson, Bonfire's lead designer. "We thought, 'Why talk around a campfire when you can talk around a bonfire?' "
Cities across North Texas are trying to capture that heat.
GAMING START-UPS
Several video game companies have emerged from Microsoft's Ensemble Studios, which closed this year. Among them:
Robot Entertainment
Based in: Plano Working on: projects for Microsoft, other efforts
Bonfire Studios
Based in: Dallas Working on: undisclosed project
Windstorm Studios
Based in: McKinney Working on: undisclosed project
Newtoy
Based in: Dallas Working on: games for the iPhone and iPod Touch
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, line,
63 Posts,
Join Date Feb 2009,
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mmmm bonfire....
or a funeral pyre....
time will tell...
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, dedicated polycounter,
1,631 Posts,
Join Date Oct 2004,
Location Irvine CA
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Controlled Chaos as well
Last edited by Jeremy Lindstrom; 04-07-2009 at 04:40 PM..
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Happy to see there's new studios opening up in Dallas area, just hope they start hiring those still looking for work. Keep the openings local.
Freelance FX Artist | spacehulk-game.com
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, card carrying polycounter,
2,253 Posts,
Join Date Jan 2005,
Location Austin, TX
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I know dudes at Cornered Rat Software, over in Bedford (pretty close to Plano). WW2OL devs. Nice group of guys/gals.
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, Moderator++,
6,234 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2004,
Location Richmond, TX
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This is good news one being in Mckinney as well,
Were i live at hehe,
Maybe there is hope,
Thanks for the good news, 
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, triangle,
276 Posts,
Join Date Mar 2006,
Location Mckinney,TX
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vassago
I know dudes at Cornered Rat Software, over in Bedford (pretty close to Plano). WW2OL devs. Nice group of guys/gals.
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Yup, them guys at Cornered Rat Software are awesome.. Oh hey that's me too..  Josh helped get me my internship here awhile back and they kept me on..  CRS isn't a startup though been around for 10 years now..
Last edited by Jeremy Lindstrom; 04-08-2009 at 08:26 AM..
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I love hearing about start ups. Glad to hear that there's still a live fresh round of entrepreneurs. That's pretty much what really drives the industry.
B
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, polygon,
525 Posts,
Join Date Apr 2005,
Location Maynard, MA
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Isn't Plano an incredibly expensive area?
Hooray for start-ups, though. Always good to hear this stuff to counter all the 'oh shit the industry is DOOOMED look at X company'
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, veteran polycounter,
3,853 Posts,
Join Date Oct 2004,
Location Maynard, MA
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Last edited by Jeremy Lindstrom; 04-08-2009 at 08:31 AM..
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sectaurs
Isn't Plano an incredibly expensive area?
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apartments range from 550s - 900s depending on how fancy you want to live.
Houses range from 300,000 - 600,000 and beyond
the further up north of plano you go the bigger the houses get cause its cheaper to build.
Freelance FX Artist | spacehulk-game.com
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, card carrying polycounter,
2,253 Posts,
Join Date Jan 2005,
Location Austin, TX
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plano is realllly affordable.  I guess that depends on hw much you make, but Plano is one of the more affordable areas in the the Dallas metroplex .
Environment Artist
Vigil Games
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, triangle,
370 Posts,
Join Date Jan 2006,
Location Austin, Tx
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geez, wish my apt was < $1000
I'm paying $1083/mo for 2bd/1bth in Redmond. Though that does include a pet rent of like $40. Still. At least it's cheaper than the last 2x1 I was renting here ($1280).
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, Moderator++,
6,234 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2004,
Location Richmond, TX
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huh. that's cheap. my friend grew up there, and I was always told how posh and expensive the place was.
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, veteran polycounter,
3,853 Posts,
Join Date Oct 2004,
Location Maynard, MA
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lol @ under 1k.
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, veteran polycounter,
3,928 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2004,
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sectaurs
huh. that's cheap. my friend grew up there, and I was always told how posh and expensive the place was.
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nah, all the rich places are moving north.
Plano is still good, but not what it probably used to be when it was new.
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Just live up the road in Mckinney like 10 to 15mins away,
I bought my 2 story 1997 model house in 2007 for $140,000 its a 2,600sq ft house,
Even allen,tx next to plano and mckinney have good prices,
Overall the cost of living in tx is way cheaper, 
Last edited by chrismaddox3d; 04-09-2009 at 08:28 AM..
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, triangle,
276 Posts,
Join Date Mar 2006,
Location Mckinney,TX
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Man I'd love to move to Dallas. I'm paying $1250 a month for a 650 sq.ft 1 bedroom in Arlington VA. And that's considered cheap.
I wish I could get some of that Texas sun, and BBQ....mmmmm
Post any job openings if you got em.
I'll start working on my drawl.
Houdiiii...
Howdyyy...
Heewwwwdyyy....
Haaauudeeeee....
Last edited by ArtsyFartsy; 04-09-2009 at 06:14 AM..
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, spline,
216 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2008,
Location Maryland
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