Interplay earnings

Corith said:
heodien said:
Why they just dont die and rest in the peace of hell?

Because doing so would mean that Herve has lost another company. His ego precludes any action on his part.

What baffles me is how fractured his mind is. Clearly, to the rest of the world, the gaming industry, creditors etc... he's a failure. How he can't comprehend that no-one has noticed is just too bloody amazing for words.
 
Josan said:
Corith said:
heodien said:
Why they just dont die and rest in the peace of hell?

Because doing so would mean that Herve has lost another company. His ego precludes any action on his part.

What baffles me is how fractured his mind is. Clearly, to the rest of the world, the gaming industry, creditors etc... he's a failure. How he can't comprehend that no-one has noticed is just too bloody amazing for words.

That is the problem with arrogant people, they can't see it. They delude themselves into believing in their own greatness. In their mind, they create reasons why the rest of us can't see it - only through their greatness can they, and it starts vicious circle that never ends.

In Herve's case, he blames Brian Fargo (and the rest of the pre-Herve employees) and sees himself as the great businessman struggling to save the company against overwhelming adversity.
 
Guys..pardon the ignorant but could i ask why Intermode got themselves onto this mess? They made plently of good games and back when i was a kid i thought they were a great company that would eventually expand.
 
davidw89 said:
Guys..pardon the ignorant but could i ask why Intermode got themselves onto this mess? They made plently of good games and back when i was a kid i thought they were a great company that would eventually expand.

If you search around the web, you can find references to Interplay Entertainment and much has been bandied about what happened to it. Why did this happen. How did Interplay crumble? Nobody, other than Herve himself will ever know the full details, but Herve did make some major missteps that give us a hint.

Herve was not a gamer, nor much of a businessman. In the fall, prior to Interplay's closure. The company produced two, nearly identical products, one of which was ready prior to the Christmas shopping season. Although he had never played either one, Herve held back the completed product back until the first of the year when the second product would be ready, on the justification that they were different enough and they complemented each other. With such a view, it was obvious to everyone, that he had not played either. As a result, Interplay had no products for that Christmas season, resulting in a major loss of revenue.

Herve also failed to understand his consumer base. He came from making games for consoles (xbox, Playstation, gamecube) and pushed Interplay product line toward that market instead of staying with PC titles that Interplay had been renowned for. He also tried to milk a popular title with cheaply made games that had little to do with the original product, other than a similar name. Interplay's customers were not fooled, they knew crap when they saw it. Herve's games did poorly compared to titles created prior to his arrival.

Herve also made other poor decisions, although minor compared to the above, no doubt they contributed to Interplay's downfall. In a stroke of utter stupidity, he closed down the game division responsible for some of Interplay biggest sellers, and fired all its personnel only days after it created a working demo of a long requested sequel to one of Interplay's most popular titles.

Interplay is still there. Herve has a small office for him and three or four others. He's sold off most his rights to the games Interplay made in the past, and he claims he has plans for a massive game project, if he can only get somebody to give him money. Since he drove interplay's stock off nasdaq and down to the value of copper penny, I can only wonder who would be so foolish as to give him financing to repeat his errors.
 
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Corith said:
Herve also failed to understand his consumer base. He came from making games for consoles (xbox, Playstation, gamecube) and pushed Interplay product line toward that market instead of staying with PC titles that Interplay had been renowned for.

Actually, his sorry ass company Titus only published a few titles for those consoles. Most of Titus' development went towards older platforms back in the 80's, but the only notable modern development was for the N64 with Supershittyman 64. I really can't see how he could release the game without the IP owners pulling a content clause withdrawal and save poor Superman from Herve's toadies. Who, I might add, includes Eric as producer of this shit. The rest seem to be bums hired from the Parisian streets, as none of them have worked in the industry before the game, nor since, and hopefully will never touch a compiler/devkit ever again.

Oh, wait...the ONLY title I could find developed by Titus in regards to X-Box or PS2 was the only thing that could beat Superman 64 in terms of pure shit, Robocrap. Released in 2003, and it blows harder than Herve must have been going at it to get the turd published. The first Robocop games were pretty good. This one is simply the worst licensed FPS of all time, not even Bethesda's butchery on the Terminator setting could compete, because those were actually playable.

How damn delusioned do you have to be in expecting people to pay for the licensed toilet paper you just wiped your ass with?

And now the titusgames.com domain has gone to someone else.
http://www.titus-interactive.com symbolizes Herve's business ability - squat.

He also tried to milk a popular title with cheaply made games that had little to do with the original product, other than a similar name. Interplay's customers were not fooled, they knew crap when they saw it. Herve's games did poorly compared to titles created prior to his arrival.

And there you have Titus' operation in a nutshell. After they didn't care to keep trying with original work, they kept picking up licenses and wiping their asses with them, then inflicting the mess upon the paying public. And now Herve's businesses are dead, thanks to his inept ignorance.
 
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