List of Blizzard Entertainment games
Blizzard Entertainment is an American video game developer and publisher based in Irvine, California. The company was founded in February 1991 under the name Silicon & Synapse by Michael Morhaime, Frank Pearce and Allen Adham. The company initially concentrated on porting other studio's games to computer platforms, as well RPM Racing (1991), a remake of Racing Destruction Set (1985).[1][2] In 1992, however, the company began producing original games for home consoles with The Lost Vikings (1992) and Rock n' Roll Racing (1993), and beginning with Warcraft: Orcs & Humans (1994) it shifted to primarily focus on original computer games. The company was renamed to Blizzard Entertainment in 1994, and in 1996 the company Condor, then developing Diablo (1997), was merged with Blizzard and renamed to Blizzard North; it remained a separate studio for the company until it was closed in 2005.[2]
Blizzard was acquired by distributor Davidson & Associates in 1994, and a chain of acquisitions over the next four years led Blizzard to being a part of Vivendi Games, a subsidiary of Vivendi; when Vivendi Games merged with Activision in 2008 the resulting company was named Activision Blizzard.[2] The name was retained when Activision Blizzard became an independent company in 2013, while Blizzard itself has been an independent subsidiary company throughout.[3][4]
Since the late 1990s, Blizzard has focused almost exclusively on the Warcraft, Diablo, StarCraft, and Overwatch series. All of Blizzard's games released since 2004 still receive expansions and updates, especially the long-running massively multiplayer online role-playing game World of Warcraft (2004). With over 100 million lifetime accounts as of 2014 and US$9 billion in revenue as of 2017, World of Warcraft is one of the best-selling computer games and highest-grossing video games of all time.[5][6] Blizzard Entertainment has developed 19 games since 1991, in addition to developing 8 ports between 1992 and 1993; 11 of those games are in the Warcraft, Diablo, and StarCraft series.
Games
[edit]As Silicon & Synapse
[edit]Title | Details |
---|---|
Original release date: November 1991[7] | Release years by system: 1991 – Super Nintendo Entertainment System[7] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: May 4, 1992[9] | Release years by system: 1992 – Sega Genesis, Super Nintendo Entertainment System[9] 1993 – MS-DOS 1994 – AmigaOS, Amiga CD32[9][10] 2003 – Game Boy Advance[9] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: June 4, 1993[12] | Release years by system: 1993 – Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega Genesis[12] 2003 – Game Boy Advance[12] |
Notes: |
As Blizzard Entertainment
[edit]Title | Details |
---|---|
Original release date: August 1994[14] | Release years by system: 1994 – Super Nintendo Entertainment System[14] 1995 – Sega Genesis[14] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: September 1994[15][16] | Release years by system: 1994 – Super Nintendo Entertainment System, MS-DOS[17] 1995 – 32X[17] 1996 – Mac OS,[17] PC-98[18] 2003 – Game Boy Advance[17] |
Notes: | |
Original release date: November 23, 1994[20] | Release years by system: 1994 – MS-DOS[20] 1996 – Mac OS[21] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: April 1995[22] | Release years by system: 1995 – Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega Genesis[22] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: December 9, 1995[20] | Release years by system: 1995 – MS-DOS, Mac OS[20] 1997 – Sega Saturn, PlayStation[23] 1999 – Windows[24] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: January 3, 1997[35] | Release years by system: 1997 – Windows[35] 1998 – Mac OS, PlayStation[36] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: February 27, 1997[43] | Release years by system: 1997 – MS-DOS, Windows, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, Super Nintendo Entertainment System[44] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: March 31, 1998[45] | Release years by system: 1998 – Windows[45] 1999 – Mac OS[45] 2000 – Nintendo 64[46] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: June 29, 2000[51] | Release years by system: 2000 – Windows, Mac OS[51] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: July 3, 2002[20] | Release years by system: 2002 – Windows, Mac OS[20] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: November 23, 2004[58] | Release years by system: 2004 – Windows, macOS[58] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: July 27, 2010[69] | Release years by system: 2010 – Windows, macOS[69] |
Notes:
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Original release date: May 15, 2012[77] | Release years by system: 2012 – Windows, macOS[77] 2013 – PlayStation 3, Xbox 360[77] 2014 – PlayStation 4, Xbox One[77] 2018 – Nintendo Switch[78] |
Notes:
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Original release date: March 11, 2014[81] | Release years by system: 2014 – Windows, macOS, iOS, Android[81] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: June 2, 2015[83] | Release years by system: 2015 – Windows, macOS[83] |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: May 24, 2016[84] | Release years by system: 2016 – Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One[84] 2019 – Nintendo Switch |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: June 2, 2022 | Release years by system: 2022 – iOS, Android[85] |
Notes: | |
Original release date: October 4, 2022 | Release years by system: 2022 – Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S |
Notes:
| |
Original release date: June 6, 2023 | Release years by system: 2023 – PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S |
Notes:
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Original release date: November 3, 2023 | Release years by system: 2023 – iOS, Android |
Notes:
|
Ports
[edit]Title | Original release | Port release | Platform | Ref(s). |
---|---|---|---|---|
Battle Chess | 1988 | 1992 | Windows, Commodore 64 | [1][88] |
Battle Chess II: Chinese Chess | 1991 | 1992 | AmigaOS | [1][88] |
J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, Vol. I | 1990 | 1992 | AmigaOS | [1][88] |
Castles | 1991 | 1992 | AmigaOS | [88] |
MicroLeague Baseball | 1984 | 1992 | AmigaOS | [88] |
Lexi-Cross | 1991 | 1992 | Mac OS | [88] |
Dvorak on Typing | 1992 | 1992 | Mac OS | [88] |
Shanghai II: Dragon's Eye | 1993 | 1993 | Windows | [1][88] |
Cancelled
[edit]Title | Cancellation date | Developer(s) | Ref(s). |
---|---|---|---|
Games People Play | "Early 1990s" | Blizzard | [89][90] |
Crixa | "Mid 1990s" | Qualia Games | [89][90] |
Denizen | 1990s | Sunsoft | [90][91] |
Shattered Nations | 1996 | Blizzard | [89][92] |
Pax Imperia 2 | August 1996[a] | Blizzard, Changeling Software | [89][90] |
Raiko | 1998 | Flextech | [90][94] |
Warcraft Adventures: Lord of the Clans | 1998 | Blizzard | [89][90] |
Nomad | 1999 | Blizzard | [89][90] |
StarCraft: Ghost | 2005 | Blizzard, Nihilistic Software, Swingin' Ape Studios | [89] |
Titan | 2014[b] | Blizzard | [89] |
Odyssey | January 25, 2024 | Blizzard | [96] |
Notes
[edit]- ^ After Pax Imperia 2's cancellation, Heliotrope Studios assumed development of the project, releasing it as Pax Imperia: Eminent Domain in 1997[89][93]
- ^ After Titan's cancellation, the development team repurposed many of its assets for Overwatch (2016)[95]
References
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External links
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