Showing posts with label game. Show all posts
Showing posts with label game. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Merchandising News Update

Doctor Who Computer Game Exclusive

A Doctor Who computer game is under development and it will feature new Doctor Who Matt Smith.

The game Doctor Who Goes Skiing has been licenced from an existing property, and the savings this has produced, in both costs and development time, mean it should be released around Easter to coincide with the start of the new series.

To provide the Next Generation graphics and content that current gamers expect the graphics from the original property have been modified and there will be an exclusive cut-scene in which new Doctor Who Matt Smith knocks himself out on the TARDIS console and dreams about a time he went skiing.



Doctor Who Goes Skiing will be available on the Xbox 360, Wii and PlayStation 3. No details have emerged yet about pricing.



In Other News
Pop group Village People reveal new line-up.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Soft We're Not

PART ONE

In 1984, two years after the launch of the Sinclair ZX Spectrum home computer, the BBC's commercial arm BBC Enterprises decided to capitalise on the British software boom by creating their own label; BBC Software.

The idea was simple. The BBC would release games based on its most popular programmes; Bergerac, All Creatures Great and Small, 'Allo 'Allo!, Doctor Who, Match of the Day and many more but the company was not a success. After poor sales and much controversy BBC Software was wound up in 1986.

The first wave of releases consisted of three games; The Borgias, an uninspiring platform game; Match of the Day; and The World at War.


The World at War was an acclaimed documentary series originally made in 1973 for Thames television but now owned by the BBC. The game placed the player in the role of Winston Churchill with a long and dangerous journey ahead of him to victory in Berlin (Click the screenshot above for a larger view).

Priced at £9.99, at a time when most games retailed for £5.95, sales of all three titles were poor. The range had not got off to a good start.