Skotos

Skotos, sometimes known as Skotos Tech, is an online game company that was founded in 1999 and released its first game, Castle Marrach, in September 2000. Its primary focus is prose online RPGs (essentially, MUDs and MUSHes), though it currently offers a total of 15 different games. These include a number of graphical RPGs and online strategy games, which are also available at other sites.

Skotos is a commercial service that charges a monthly fee for its services. It is also the owner of RPGnet, a free tabletop role-playing web site.

Skotos Games

SOE Denver's Games

Sony Online Entertainment acquired Worlds Apart Productions as of August 10, 2006.[1] Worlds Apart Productions is now known as SOE-Denver.

Worlds Apart Productions originally intended to provide text-based role-playing games online and launched The Eternal City in 1996, and later released Grendel's Revenge in conjunction with Skotos Tech Inc. However, declining interest in text-based games led WAP to seek other online gaming niches. Worlds Apart Productions partnered with Decipher Inc. in 2003 to create the Lord of the Rings Trading Card Game and noting the success of the game, then developed the online engine that allowed them to bring the card game online and reach a broader audience. The Lord of the Rings game was followed by the equally successful Star Trek Online, Star Chamber: The Harbinger Saga and The Auto Assault Online card games.

Two of Worlds Apart Production's games are available solely through the Skotos service. Scott Martins, co-founder of World Apart Productions, stated on the Skotos.net forums that the two text-based games would continue to be offered by Skotos Tech Inc. after concern was expressed by players upon hearing of WAP's acquisition by Sony Online Entertainment.[2]

In 2010, Sony SOE divested itself of any owning interest in The Eternal City and Grendel's Revenge, ceding the titles to Skotos.[3]

In 2010, Sony SOE shut down the Sony SOE Denver division.[4]

Games created by Worlds Apart Production, either independently or in conjunction with Skotos Tech., include:

Worlds Apart Productions was also in the process of creating a Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game (MMORPG) prior to joining Skotos Tech. Called The Eternal City: 3D, screenshots previously available on the old Worlds Apart website revealed some of the landmarks visible in The Eternal City. However, the project was abandoned in favour of the trading card games which eventually led to Worlds Apart's acquisition by SOE.

Skotos Strategy Games

There is currently one strategy game available exclusively through Skotos:

Other Skotos Channel Games

There are a number of other games currently available through Skotos on a non-exclusive basis:

Some games used to be available on the Skotos Channel, but were removed in 2006 for lack of players:

Technical infrastructure

In February 1999, Skotos acquired a reseller's license to commercial use rights for DGD, an LPMud server.[6] Skotos used the DGD platform in developing a number of its online games. [7]

Other Skotos Services

Skotos also has a free article archive available. It's largely centered on online game design, though a few authors have also written about online game playing experiences and the gaming industry in general.

The most notable columns at Skotos have been Jessica Mulligan's Biting the Hand and a column by Richard Bartle, the father of modern MUD design (and thus most MMORPGs and other online games).

Skotos also owns RPGnet and continues to offer it as a free service.

In 2000, Skotos contributed an article on its proximity system to the MUD community webzine Imaginary Realities.[8]

Practices

Skotos uses a "Story Points" system to reward players who refer new players and participate in other community-building activities. These are redeemable for both in-game and out-of-game benefits.[9]

Reception

Skotos has been featured by Wired, TechTV, Slashdot, GrrrlGamer, Gamasutra, and Gamegrene.

Skotos has received attention for the quality of its publicly available articles on virtual world design[10]

External links

References

  1. "SOE Acquires Assets of Worlds Apart Productions". Retrieved 2007-01-18.
  2. "Skotos.net Forums: Sony bought Worlds-apart". Retrieved 2007-01-18.
  3. "Celebrating TEC's Fifteenth Anniversary". Retrieved 2011-01-12.
  4. "SOE closing studios, cutting 205 staff". Retrieved 2011-03-31.
  5. "The present and future of Grendel's Revenge". Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  6. "Skotos Tech Acquires DGD License" (Press release). Skotos. 1999-02-05. Retrieved 2010-04-18.
  7. Croes, Felix (2010-04-02). "Dworkin's Game Driver - Open Source Release". SourceForge. Retrieved 2010-04-18.
  8. Skotos Tech Inc. (May 2000). "The Skotos Proximity System". Imaginary Realities. Archived from the original on 2006-03-26.
  9. Appelcline, Shannon (2002-03-04). "Announcing Story Points". Skotos Forums. Skotos. Retrieved 2010-04-20.
  10. Bartle, Richard (2003). Designing Virtual Worlds. New Riders. p. 37. ISBN 0-13-101816-7. Neither is it surprising that the best informative and speculative articles about virtual world design are being written forand made publicly available for free bya company specializing in immersive text-based worlds, Skotos.Bartle, Richard (2003). Designing Virtual Worlds. New Riders. p. 61. ISBN 0-13-101816-7. Perhaps the best expression of this difference is seen in the comparison between the early advertising slogans of Verant (makers of EverQuest) and Skotos (makers of Castle Marrach)): * Verant: You're in Our World Now. * Skotos: Why Yes, I am God. Skotos' games have only a fraction of the players that EverQuest has, but their slogan sells more T-shirts.
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