EA Locks Up Lord of the Rings IP 51
Gamasutra has the word that EA has the Lord of the Rings IP locked up through the end of next year. With the additional license for the books under their wing and no competition from Vivendi, they have big plans set for their next game inside the franchise world. "The announcement follows EA's previously announced The Lord of the Rings: The White Council, an open world RPG for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PC. However, with EA making plans for a new The Lord Of The Rings title, the fate of this project, once referred to as the cryptic Project Gray Company, remains uncertain. EA confirmed in early February that the game, while not canceled, had been put on hold." Relatedly, Game|Life notes that one million players will soon be traveling through Middle Earth as the open beta for Lord of the Rings Online gets underway. If you signed up to get in, you probably will. Update: 03/30 04:00 GMT by Z : The text referring to the White Council game was edited on the Gamasutra story, and here as well to reflect that.
Isn't this news like 5 years old? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
What age? (Score:2)
Hobbit Crossing? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:1, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Uhm... Are you talking about Kynapse?
LOTS of games [kynogon.com] are using that.
Not the Sim 2, though.
...and (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Well the parent was complaining about the USE of 'relatedly' in the summary. Checking your own link you will see that relatedly is an ADVERB, pray tell then, what verb is it modifying in the summary? While it is a valid word, it's usage is incorrect here.
Re: (Score:1)
On the other hand, I'd argue that the sentence used above as an example isn't actually a good one: words are frequently allowed to move around in English sentence by particular rules. Thus, "Quickly, run this letter to the mailbox" is equivalent to "Run this lettere to the mailbox quickly" - in both cases, "quickly" modifies the verb phrase "run this letter to the ma
Re: (Score:2)
Sorry, folks, but the purpose of language is to express meaning in a clear fashion, not follow arbitrary rules. In this case, "relatedly" works quite well as is.
Re: (Score:2)
Allow me to translate, then.
>Sorry, folks, but the purpose of language is to express meaning in a clear fashion, not follow arbitrary rules. In this case, "relatedly" works quite well as is.
Sucks, dudes, speakin' be what it is.
But did EA get dibs on (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:But did EA get dibs on (Score:4, Informative)
Silmarilion takes place over about 5500 years. The first 4500 were before the awakening of the elves, 500 or so before the sundering of the Noldor, and then another 500 between days after the creation of the Sun and the Moon until Melkor was cast down.
Long time, so sayeth wikipedia.
That's one million *invited*... (Score:2, Insightful)
Strictly speaking, "open beta" usually means all 6+ billion of us are "invited".
'Course, it is LotR, so that expectation might not be out of line.
I liked this, too: "the most complete and authentic massively multiplayer online (MMO) world based upon the famous Books of J.R.R. Tolkien."
Uhm... ok!
Re: (Score:1)
Strictly speaking, "open beta" usually means all 6+ billion of us are "invited".
Re: (Score:1)
hm... (Score:1, Insightful)
but now, with all these games, merchandise, etc: i truly believe that this is not doing any good to the spirit
Clarification (Score:4, Informative)
That is, of course, with the exception of the LotR MMORPG mentioned in the article, which is being developed by Turbine, published in the US by Midway, and published in the UK by Codemasters.
Re: (Score:1)
EA owns you next... (Score:1)
Madden LOTR 2008 (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
MIddle Earth Online (Score:1)
http://www.gamespot.com/pc/rpg/middleearthonline/
Re: (Score:1)
Takes places during the trilogy.
Game play is ok, but nothing really catches interest. The graphics are interesting, but the interface is confusing. Not being able to open the post office door until accepting a quest is quite odd. Travel takes forever. Major events that the player can do nothing about run the game.
I'm wondering how it'll sell after the beta ends.
Re: (Score:2)
I've heard mixed stuff about D&D Online as well. Not sure how well that's doing. Personally, I think they're tr
They are claiming 600K beta/open beta accounts (Score:2)
As you stated, nothing really catches the interest of most players. Summed up, its the setting without the story. Its got most of the areas expected, the features look right, but the story really isn't there. The NPCs look like zombies with no real animations to speak of. think Night of the Living dead with even less talking
Radagast (Score:4, Funny)
I think it makes perfect sense for them to use the Sims AI for a Middle Earth environment, especially around the behaviors of the Istari (wizards). For example, Gandalf can change his raiment whenever he wants to, in remote wilderness and underground situations, without a closet or seamstress in sight. Saruman can gab on and on and on about the same megolomanic topic, blindly ignoring how his friends are all getting annoyed with little red -- signs over their heads. Also, it takes several months for Radagast to walk *anywhere*, even when there's significant time pressure to deliver important news.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Since people aren't going to RTFA... (Score:4, Informative)
The license for the movies and the license for the books are two separate licenses.
In addition, the license for MMOs and the license for non-MMOs are two separate licenses.
So that's four licenses total. Vivendi had the licenses for the books, EA had the non-MMO license for the movies.
Additional detail, based on articles I've read on the topic:
EA has been churning out tons of games based on the movies since Fellowship hit theaters, and in 2005 they got the non-MMO license for the books as well. I'm not sure whether or not EA ever had the MMO license for the movies, but that license is not particularly valuable without the MMO license for the books as well. (You'd only be able to show things depicted in the films, NOTHING else.)
Turbine started developing the LOTRO MMO for Vivendi, this was when it was called Middle-Earth Online. Turbine eventually bought the license from Vivendi and re-branded the game as Lord of the Rings Online, they're self-publishing but Midway and Codemasters are handling distribution.
I imagine that Turbine must have investigated getting the MMO license for the movies as well, but I do not know if that ever happened. My understanding of these things is that if they went with that, they might have to rework all of their art assets to match the films, which would likely be a nightmarish PITA.
So now we've got EA with the non-MMO license for both the movies and the books. Turbine has the MMO license for the books. I have no clue who has the MMO license for the movies, not that it'd be valuable to anyone other than Turbine at this point.
Also please note that this is JUST the Lord of the Rings trilogy I'm talking about here. Silmarillion and The Hobbit are their own messy subjects.
Re: (Score:1)
I think Midway's in it as more than a distributor.
Yahoo Video Games [yahoo.com]
Game Invasion [lockergnome.com]
Re: (Score:1, Informative)
Stern pinball came out with a LOTR pinball in 2003 (Score:2)
http://www.sternpinball.com/Lord-of-the-Rings.sht
and it is a good game you can play it on your pc with vp + vpinmame.
submission quote is incorrect (Score:3, Informative)
If It Follows the Usual EA Trend (Score:1)
LOTR Online is flawed (Score:2)
I got the beta for LOTORO (Score:1)
if not, I'm gonna have to go back to COH, WOW or EQ2 again. . .
unnecessary (Score:2)
Ok, I understand wanting to make the best out of a license, the lord of the rings has been a very lucrative IP for electronic arts in the past, The Lord of the Rings: The White Council has been in development for quite some time now so they want to get that out the door, and the generally comfort of using proven IP, but really I hope this brings an end to this IP. This is quite literally the 10th(27th if you consider each sku separately) lord of the rin