Digital Illusions Canada

Canadian video game developer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CE Digital Illusions Canada Inc., (trade name: Digital Illusions Canada or DICE Canada) was a Canadian game developer and a subsidiary of Digital Illusions CE.

FormerlySandbox Studios (1999-2001)
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
FoundedJanuary 1999; 27 years ago (1999-01)
Quick facts Formerly, Company type ...
CE Digital Illusions Canada Inc.
FormerlySandbox Studios (1999-2001)
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
FoundedJanuary 1999; 27 years ago (1999-01)
FounderSteve Bergenholtz
Defunct5 October 2006; 19 years ago (2006-10-05)
Headquarters,
Canada
OwnerDigital Illusions CE (2001-2006)
Number of employees
25 (2006)
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History

The company was formed in January 1999 by Steve Bergenholtz, the co-founder of Utopia Technologies.[1] In November 1999, they opened up a development studio in London, Ontario.[2]

In April 2000, the company opened up a partnership program for independent developers.[3]

In April 2001, Digital Illusions CE announced that they had acquired and merged the assets of Sandbox Studios into a newly formed subsidiary, Digital Illusions North America.[4][5] The newly-formed division allowed DICE to form its own development, production and sales in the North American market, and added 50 employees to DICE's staff amounting to 150 total employees.[6] Later on, Fredrik Liljegren, who co-founded the original parent company, would join DICE Canada as its studio manager.[7]

Under its new name, DICE Canada continued its focus on the family-friendly market. In May 2001, Digital Illusions signed a publishing deal with Knowledge Adventure and its parent company Vivendi Universal Interactive Publishing to develop games based on popular children's toy properties.[8][9] A similar deal was made with TDK Mediactive in December 2002 for a game based on The Land Before Time franchise.[10]

By 2005, the studio was restructured to work on expansion packs and spin-offs of existing DICE properties.[11]

In March 2006, Electronic Arts announced that they would acquire all outstanding shares in DICE.[12] After the acquisition was completed, EA announced on 5 October that they would close Digital Illusions Canada[13] with its remaining employees transferring to DICE's main offices in Stockholm, EA Canada or other EA studios.[14] Other employees, including DICE co-founder Fredrik Liljegren, opened up a successor studio named RedJade on 16 October, using the name of a company Liljegren used when he previously left DICE.[15]

Games developed

References

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