In March 2021,Microsoft acquired Bethesda's parent company ZeniMax Media, maintaining that the company will continue to operate as a separate business.[1] Part of theMicrosoft Gaming division, Bethesda Softworks retains its function as the publisher of games developed by the different studios under ZeniMax Media.
Before founding Bethesda Softworks, Christopher Weaver was atechnology forecaster and acommunications engineer in the television and cable industries. After finishinggraduate school, he was hired by theAmerican Broadcasting Company, where he wrote several memos about "the importance of alternative distribution systems and how satellites and broadband networks would impact network television", which landed him the position of manager of technology forecasting. After several national magazines quoted his articles on "the exciting prospects for cabled distribution systems", he was recruited by theNational Cable Television Association and created its Office of Science and Technology, where he helped design high-speed data communication systems for several member companies of the association. Eventually, Weaver became the chief engineer for theUnited States House Energy Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, where he influenced legislation that affected the telephone, television, and cable industries.[2]
In the meantime, Weaver also founded VideoMagic Laboratories with a friend from the Architecture Machine Group at theMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). They authored and assembled a 400-page business plan to commercialize their prior lab work and, through the Industrial Liaison Office at MIT, came in contact with a wealthy family in the electronics industry that provided VideoMagic withventure capital. The company developed several technologies, including location-based entertainment systems, that Weaver deemed "radical and cutting-edge" but put out prematurely, causing little commercial return. The funding family, having financial issues of its own, dropped out of the venture and sold off some of VideoMagic's properties.[2] After leaving the House Subcommittee some years later, Weaver established Media Technology Associates, Limited (renamed Media Technology Limited in March 1988) in June 1981.[2][3] The company provided engineering and media consulting for private companies and government organizations.[2] Media Technology had offices in Maryland and New York.[4]
At Media Technology, Weaver worked with Ed Fletcher, anelectrical engineer with whom he had collaborated at VideoMagic, on video games forLaserDisc-based systems until that industry crashed in 1984. While waiting for potential new contracts, the company acquired anAmiga personal computer with which the two began to experiment. Fletcher was a fan ofAmerican football and suggested that they develop a football video game for the system, which Weaver supported despite no interest in the sport.[5][6] Fletcher developed the game, later namedGridiron!, out of Weaver's house in Bethesda, Maryland, in roughly nine months.[5] His initial approach was to uselookup tables to map player inputs to predetermined outcomes.[2][5] Weaver disliked this concept and, at his behest, he and Fletcher devised a more realistic, physics-based system.[6] No artists or animators were involved in the project, which gave the game a sub-par graphical presentation for the time.[5]
Weaver formed Bethesda Softworks "on the proverbial kitchen table" of his Bethesda home as a division of Media Technology on June 28, 1986.[2][7][8] The formation was described as an experiment "to see if the PC market was a viable place to develop games".[2][9] Weaver originally named the company "Softwerke" but found that the name was taken by a company based inVirginia. Weaver and the owner of that company agreed to co-exist rather than fight over the title, and Weaver changed the name of his company to Bethesda Softworks. He had considered creating a unique name, such as one using the word "magic" after a quote fromArthur C. Clarke, but "Bethesda Softworks" ultimately stuck.[2][10] Unlike VideoMagic, Bethesda Softworks was entirely self-funded, starting with roughlyUS$100,000, and was not attached to any business plan.[2]Gridiron! was released as the company's first game later in 1986 for the Amiga,Atari ST, andCommodore 64 systems.[5][6] The initial release of a few hundred copies distributed in plastic bags was sold out within one week, to the surprise of Bethesda Softworks.[5]
Early games scored respectably in the gaming press.[11] Electronic Arts was working on the firstJohn Madden Football, and hired Bethesda to help finish developing it, and acquired distribution rights for future versions ofGridiron!.[9] In June 1988,[12] after no new cross-console version ofGridiron! had been released, Bethesda stopped work on the project and sued Electronic Arts forUS$7.3 million, claiming EA halted the release while incorporating many of its elements intoMadden.[13] The case was resolved out of court.[14]
Courteney Cox, later known for her role in the sitcomFriends, worked at the publisher briefly in the 1980s.[15]
This sectionneeds expansion with: Information regarding Daggerfall's launch. You can help byadding to it.(July 2019)
In 1990, the company moved from Bethesda to Rockville, Maryland.[16] By February 1993, the company employed 40 people.[17]
The first game Bethesda published and developed, based on a popular film franchise, wasThe Terminator for MS-DOS. The title was released in July 1991, coinciding with the theatrical release of the filmTerminator 2: Judgment Day.[18]
Between 1994 and 1997, Bethesda was developing aspace combat game titledThe 10th Planet.[20] It was a collaboration between Bethesda and Roland Emmerich'sCentropolis Entertainment. During development, Centropolis chose to stop working on the game due to the company's commitments to its films.[21] The project was never released.
In 1995, Bethesda Softworks acquiredNoctropolis developer Flashpoint Productions, whichBrent Erickson had founded in 1992.[22]
In June and July 1997, Bethesda announced a partnership withCBS Enterprises to produce the first-ever true companion PC series of games for the television seriesPensacola: Wings of Gold.[28][27][29] By December 1997, the first CD-ROM game was still in production.[30][25]
In 1997 and 1998, Bethesda released twoThe Elder Scrolls spin-offs based onDaggerfall's code—Battlespire andRedguard—neither of which enjoyed the success ofDaggerfall andArena. The downturn in sales was not limited just toThe Elder Scrolls franchise, and the company considered filing for bankruptcy as a result.[9]
In October 1999,[31] Pete Hines joined Bethesda to head up its marketing department, running it as what he described as aone-man band. At the start of his tenure, the company had employed around 15 people in its Rockville headquarters.[32]
In 1999, Weaver andRobert A. Altman formed the holding companyZeniMax Media. In an interview withEdge, he described the company as being a top-level administrative structure rather than a "parent company" for its holdings, explaining that "ZeniMax and Bethesda for all intents and purposes are one thing. Bethesda has no accounting department, we have no finance, we have no legal, our legal department [and] our financial department is ZeniMax, we all operate as one unit."[33][34][9][35] According to the designer Bruce Nesmith, Altman was principally interested in Bethesda's web development business at Vir2L Studios, not the game development aspect.[36] ZeniMax acquired Media Technology in July 1999 and Bethesda Softworks was reorganized as a division of ZeniMax.[10][9] By then Bethesda employed nearly 100 people.[37]
In 2001, Bethesda Game Studios was established as the development team, leaving Bethesda Softworks to focus on all publishing operations of ZeniMax Media.[38]
In 2002, Weaver stopped being employed by ZeniMax. He later filed a lawsuit against ZeniMax, claiming he was ousted by his new business partners after giving them access to his brand and was owedUS$1.2 million in severance pay. ZeniMax filed counterclaims[39] and moved to dismiss the case,[40] claiming Weaver had gone through emails of other employees to find evidence. This dismissal was later vacated on appeal,[41] and the parties settled out of court. Weaver remained a major shareholder in the company; as of 2007, he said that he still owned 33% of ZeniMax's stock.[9] Providence Equity bought 25% of ZeniMax's stock in late 2007,[42] and an additional stake in 2010.[43]
In January 2006, Bethesda acquired the rights to theStar Trek series of video games.[45] The first game published by the company wasStar Trek: Encounters, released in 2006.
In September 2009, Bethesda filed a lawsuit against Interplay Entertainment, after being unsatisfied with Interplay's development of theFallout massively multiplayer online game project. Bethesda stopped funding the project, and Interplay was forced to abandon work on it.[14]
Between 2007 and 2010, Bethesda raisedUS$450 million in new capital fromProvidence Equity Partners[46][47] to fund expansion efforts. In February 2008, the company opened a European publishing arm in London, named ZeniMax Europe, to distribute titles throughout UK/EMEA territories under the Bethesda Softworks brand.[48] This was followed in by opening publishing offices in Tokyo, Frankfurt, Paris, Eindhoven, Hong Kong, Sydney and Moscow in 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013 and 2018 respectively.[49][50][51][52][53][54]
In 2011, Bethesda filed a lawsuit againstMojang (developers ofMinecraft) for usingScrolls as the name of a new digital card game, which sounded too close toThe Elder Scrolls trademarked by Bethesda.[14]
In the mid-2010s, Bethesda began to experiment with new kinds of games, releasingFallout Shelter, its first mobile,free-to-play game in the summer of 2015.[56] A year later, it released areboot of id Software'sDoom, after several years of development as a failed attempt to produce a sequel toDoom 3. Later that year,Zen Studios releasedvirtualpinball adaptations of three games that Bethesda released during the decade thus far (The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim,Fallout 4 and the 2016 reboot ofDoom) as theBethesda Pinball collection for its pinball games.[57] Bethesda went on to release two more free-to-play mobile games based onThe Elder Scrolls series, acard battle game titledThe Elder Scrolls: Legends in 2017[58] and a first-person role-playing game titledThe Elder Scrolls: Blades in 2019.[59]
When Nintendo unveiled its new hybrid console, theNintendo Switch, Bethesda expressed support for it and released ports ofThe Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim andDoom for that system in November 2017. A year later, it also portedFallout Shelter, and has future plans to do the same for its twoElder Scrolls mobile games.
In late 2018, Bethesda announced and released its first massively multiplayer online game,Fallout 76, a prequel to theFallout series.[61] Upon its initial release, it was given mixed reviews for its poor quality and was embroiled in several other controversies, including problems with tie-in products and a data breach.
The following year saw Bethesda announce sequels toRage andDoom,Rage 2[62] andDoom Eternal.[63] The former was released on May 14, while the latter released in early 2020 shortly after theCOVID-19 pandemic reached the United States, following a series of delays for polish after the negative reception ofFallout 76's initial launch.
In November 2019,Human Head Studios shut down while Bethesda established a new studio, Roundhouse Studios, offering all Human Head employees a position within it.[64]
In 2016, Bethesda had released its own application launcher for PC.Fallout 76 andFallout Shelter were exclusives to the launcher before eventually released on Steam.[65] In 2022, Bethesda shut down the launcher. The launcher was mostly met with negative reception.[66][67][68]PC Gamer said that "Bethesda's launcher seems to be designed more as a pretty interface to purchase Bethesda's games than a way of managing them. [...] the client feels more like a store than anything."[65]
In March 2020, Bethesda Softworks publishedDoom Eternal, a sequel to the 2016 reboot forPlayStation 4,Windows,Xbox One and theStadia games streaming service fromGoogle. The game's release was one of many that was affected by theimpact of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic on the games industry, prompting retailers such asGameStop to begin selling physical copies a day in advance of its general release to minimize crowding of customers.[69] To coincide withEternal's original release, a remaster ofDoom 64 was also launched as both a standalone release, and as a pre-order bonus for the former game on the aforementioned platforms.[70] The re-release was co-developed by id Software andNightdive Studios, and includes a new post-campaign expansion.[71]
In September 2020,Microsoft entered an agreement to acquire Bethesda's parent company ZeniMax Media for $7.5 billion, gaining ownership over all of Bethesda's associated development teams, now as part ofMicrosoft Gaming. The agreement stipulated that Bethesda continued to finance and self-publish their games and that titles on other platforms would be decided on a "case-by-case" basis, but that the merger would also allow Bethesda's existing back-catalog of titles to become available on Microsoft'sXbox Game Pass service for console, PC and cloud, and that select future games from the publisher would become exclusives forWindows and the Xbox Series X/S consoles, which simultaneously launched that November.[72] The acquisition of ZeniMax Media was formally completed on March 9, 2021.[73][74] Following the merger's completion, Xbox CEOPhil Spencer clarified that future titles from Bethesda would primarily ship on any platforms hosting Xbox Game Pass.[75]
In September 2021, Bethesda publishedDeathloop, a first-person shooter with time-warping mechanics fromArkane Lyon. The following March, Bethesda releasedGhostwire: Tokyo, a first-person horror-themed action-adventure game developed by Tango Gameworks.[76][77] Both games were announced as being timed console exclusives forPlayStation 5 before Microsoft purchased ZeniMax Media, an existing contractual obligation that would be honored by Microsoft despite the amended terms.[78] Both titles were eventually released on Xbox Series X/S a year following their respective PlayStation 5 versions.[79][80]
In January 2023, Bethesda announced and releasedHi-Fi Rush from Tango Gameworks. The publisher purposely kept the game's development secret by due to possible skepticism and uncertainty regarding audience feedback.[81] In May 2023, Bethesda launchedRedfall for Windows and Xbox Series X/S from Arkane Austin, though it received a largely mixed to negative reception, with scrutiny directed towards the uninspired narrative, the overall repetitiveness in objectives during the campaign, and consistent technical problems.[82][83] In September 2023, Bethesda publishedStarfield for Windows and Xbox Series X/S. Developed by Bethesda Game Studios, the game marked the studio's first wholly originalintellectual property in over 25 years.[84][85] Upon the early access launch, the game reached a peak of 230,000 concurrent players onSteam within two hours. Xbox CEO Phil Spencer announced on launch day that the game subsequently became the most played Xbox Series X/S-exclusive game since the console's launch, as well as the most wish-listed game on Steam for either Xbox or Bethesda in their respective histories.[86]Starfield reached ten million players across Xbox and PC by September 19, making it the biggest launch period in Bethesda's history as a publisher.[87]
In October 2023, Bethesda's head of publishing Pete Hines announced he would be retiring.[88] Later that month, a corporate restructuring of the newly formedMicrosoft Gaming subsidiary took place following Microsoft'sacquisition of Activision-Blizzard, that saw the promotion of executive Matt Booty from president ofXbox to overseeing their entire Game Content and Studios business, with Jamie Leder still retaining supervision over ZeniMax Media as a "limited integration entity" that would now report to Matt.[89] In December 2023, Jill Braff was appointed to the role as head of Bethesda and ZeniMax Media's development teams, while simultaneously retaining her existing duties as the General Manager of Integrations and Casual Games forXbox Game Studios.[90]
In May 2024, Microsoft announced that they were closing Arkane Austin, Tango Gameworks and Alpha Dog Games as part of a significant organization restructure of Bethesda's operations.[91] Xbox Game Content and Studios head Matt Booty explained that the shuttering of the studios reflected a desire to prioritize the development of "high-impact titles" and investing more in Bethesda's catalogue of blockbuster franchises.[92] Mobile developer Roundhouse Studios also ceased activity, with its team being consolidated intoZeniMax Online Studios.[93] Development of all DLC content forRedfall also ceased.[94] Xbox presidentSarah Bond cited a necessity to keep their gaming business growing through periods of transition and industry stagnation, as a reason for the studio closures. Addressing Tango Gameworks directly, she proposed that the varying metrics for success on a game-by-game basis was examined when deciding to shut the studio down.[95] Despite Tango's closure, Matt Booty reiterated the necessity for Xbox to house smaller budget titles for "prestige and awards" much likeHi-Fi Rush.[96] On August 12, 2024, South Korean publisherKrafton announced they had entered an agreement with Microsoft Gaming and Bethesda to revive and acquire Tango Gameworks in its entirety, which also included the transferral of theHi-Fi Rush license.[97] Publishing rights to either the originalHi-Fi Rush or Tango Gameworks' previous games remained with Microsoft.[98][99]
XnGine is a 3-D graphics engine that was developed by Bethesda in the 1990s. It incorporated technology advances that made games more realistic. The engine featured quicker action, unrestricted viewing angles and freedom of movement. Its proprietary technology integrates 360-degree rotation with fully textured polygons, SVGA/VGA graphics and specialized video effects. XnGine can generate weather effects, such as snow, sleet and fog; realistic shading; and textured, contoured terrain.[100] In an Interview with PCM&E Magazine in 1996,Todd Howard described the engine as a true 3D engine that delivered above any other engine in its lighting in that it uses real-time phong shading, which means that light effects from fires, explosions, the moon, or whatever will bleed off and light up anything the light will touch.[101]
In 2001, Bethesda Softworks publishedEchelon in the United States, a video game developed by the Russian development studio Madia. Madia stated that Bethesda did not pay for boxed sales of the game, as was allegedly specified in the contract. The developers at Madia wrote an open letter to Bethesda in which they have detailed the affair, but Bethesda refused to pay. In the end Madia decided not to take it to court. Pete Hines, VP of PR at Bethesda, stated that Madia presented misleading allegations about Bethesda's role as publisher ofEchelon in North America and that Bethesda had no contractual obligations to Madia.[103][104]
Bethesda Softworks and ZeniMax Media have been accused of attempting a hostile acquisition ofHuman Head Studios, as well as a successful hostile acquisition ofArkane Studios before that.[105] According to a report fromIGN, ZeniMax started purposefully failing Human Head's project milestones so that they would not get paid, allowing ZeniMax to buy the company at a reduced rate. They were accused of doing the same thing with Arkane Studios, although in Arkane's case, the studio gave in and allowed themselves to be bought.[106] The failed hostile acquisition of Human Head Studios led to cancellation of Human Head'sPrey 2, according to the report.[107]
Bethesda also pressured developer No Matter Games to change the name of their gamePrey for the Gods toPraey for the Gods, as Bethesda felt the initial title infringed upon the trademark of their own game,Prey.[108][109] Pete Hines, who serves as Bethesda's VP of marketing, said Bethesda would have risked losing theirPrey trademark if they had not requested the title change.[110]
In September 2011, Bethesda's parent company, ZeniMax Media, filed a lawsuit againstMojang, claiming that Mojang's planned trademark of the titleScrolls infringed upon Bethesda's trademark ofThe Elder Scrolls series.[113] On October 18,Markus Persson announced that Mojang had won the interim injunction, but that Bethesda still had the option to file an appeal.[114] In March 2012, Mojang and Bethesda reached a settlement, in which Mojang would not trademark Scrolls, but Bethesda would not contest Mojang's naming ofScrolls, so long as it would not be a direct competitor againstThe Elder Scrolls.[115]
In 2018, Bethesda Softworks suedBehaviour Interactive, the company responsible for developingFallout Shelter, for appearing to copy the game's design onto a tie-in mobile game for theWestworld franchise.[116] The issue was settled with undisclosed terms, allowing Bethesda to drop the lawsuit.[117]
In May 2024, Microsoft announced that four Bethesda studios would be closed in relation to a major restructure to the publisher's operations. Arkane Austin (Prey,Redfall), Tango Gameworks (The Evil Within,Ghostwire: Tokyo,Hi-Fi Rush) and Alpha Dog Games (Mighty DOOM) ceased activity entirely, while Roundhouse Studios was consolidated intoZeniMax Online Studios.[91] Xbox's Game Content and Studios manager Matt Booty explained that the closure of the aforementioned teams was due to an internal shift in focus towards other areas in Bethesda and Microsoft's portfolio, including more "priority games".[118] The closure of the studios drew significantly negative reactions, with particular fan ire directed towards the sudden shuttering of Tango Gameworks a year followingHi-Fi Rush's launch and positive critical reception, as well as its proximity to the game's launch onPlayStation 5.[119] Fans additionally cited the hypocrisy present in past statements by Microsoft Gaming executives, namely an older tweet by Xbox marketing head Aaron Greenberg insinuatingHi-Fi Rush was a success in "all key measurements and expectations", as well as an older anecdote from the web documentaryPower On: The Story of Xbox (2021), in which both Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer and president of XboxSarah Bond reflected on the closure of formerFable developerLionhead Studios in 2016, implying they were learning from their mismanagement of the studio.[120] Users onSteam alsoreview bombedHi-Fi Rush with positive reception in support and gratitude towards Tango Gameworks following the announcement.[121]
The closures of Tango and Arkane Austin similarly drew widespread backlash across the games industry. Dinga Bakaba, studio director at Arkane's Lyon team at Bethesda, lambasted the closures as a "fucking gut stab", and went on to liken Microsoft's actions and address of the situation towards being used as "strawmen for miscalculations/blind spots" in addition to producing work environments comparable to "darwinist jungles."[122] FormerBethesda Game Studios designer and Something Wicked Games CEO Jeff Gardiner observed a game development climate where "the people who made the games [that] have to suffer, not the people who simply made money off the games." David Goldfarb, studio creative director and founder ofMetal: Hellsinger (2022) developer The Outsiders, expressed disillusionment towards the affected teams losing their creative autonomy.[123] FormerPlayStation executive andIron Galaxy co-CEOAdam Boyes posted an image on hisTwitter page that noted the irony of these closures occurring just as Microsoft posted a 17% increase in revenue over the third quarter of its 2024 fiscal year.[124] AnIGN article chronicling the reactions to the Xbox business' current controversies cited two former employees of the company with anonymity; one recalled having conversations with multiple key alumni from theoriginal Xbox team that all concluded "It's no longer Xbox, butMicrosoft Gaming". The second source likened the situation to "ananaconda trying to ingest anelephant", additionally criticizing Microsoft for their inability to quickly integrate Bethesda into their overall strategy before moving to acquireActivision Blizzard, a publisher roughly "three times the size" of Microsoft's Xbox division.[125] Original Xbox team headSeamus Blackley sent his wishes to the developers let go by Microsoft, remarking on how "scary" it is to pursue creative ideas in game design, while also stating his awareness towards "the stench of money-guy decision making" and its ability to impede on development teams and their aspirations. He also exclaimed his belief in the Xbox team and that he was confident "this isn't the end of the story."[126]
In August 2024,Krafton announced it had acquired Tango and theHi-Fi Rush IP from Microsoft and Bethesda, with plans to "continue developing the Hi-Fi RUSH IP and explore future projects."[127] In a statement attributed to news outlet Windows Central, a Microsoft spokesperson said "We're working with Krafton to enable the team at Tango Gameworks to continue to build games together and we look forward to playing their next great game. There will be no impact to the existing catalog of Tango games."[1]
^"Watch the graphics puck up". Amiga Computing, Volume 2, number 4, September 1989, p.p.18-19. September 1989. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedJuly 17, 2016.