zootfly posts

Prison Break PC game limps its way to stores March 30

It's really, really hard for us to get excited about a game based on a TV series that was once hot but then fell apart in its last year before it got canceled. Yet that's what the upcoming game adaptation of the cult hit TV show Prison Break has to deal with. It's going to be a tough sell to get anyone to be interested in this title but publishers Southpeak Games and Deep Sliver are going to give it a shot.

Developed by Zootfly, the game does do something smart in that it's set during the show's first year. The game's storyline runs parallel to the first season's prison escape plot as your player character is also sent to Fox River State Penitentiary to find out why a person with no criminal record like the show's lead Michael Scofield would suddenly decide to rob a bank. Southpeak says to expect the game to ship to stores on March 30 for the PC for $39.99. We suspect only diehard fans of Wentworth Miller will be interested.

[Via Joystiq]

Prison Break TV show-based game officially announced

It was a rumor last year but today the official word is that a game based on Prison Break TV show is on its way to the PC and other platforms. Too bad the TV show itself was canceled by Fox earlier this year. The game was known to be under the Brash Entertainment publishing wing before they imploded in the fall of 2008.

Thankfully the game, developed by Zootfly and now to be published by Deep Silver, follows the events from the TV show's first (and best) season. The game's storyline runs parallel to the first season's prison escape plot as your player character is also sent to Fox River State Penitentiary.

Your goal? Find out why the TV show's main character Michael Scofield would suddenly decide to rob a bank even though he had no previous criminal record (as fans of the show know, he got himself arrested so he could go to jail and try to free his brother who was framed for murder and about to go to the chair).

Your new character will meet several folks from the TV show and use "diverse climbing and stealth skills" to explore the prison. There's no word on what your character does when, or even if, he finds out the truth about Scofield's plans. There's also no word on when the game itself will be released.

I pity the fool that doesn't buy the Mr. T game (with Will Wright?)


We would think this is an April Fool's joke if this wasn't April 27. However, Slovenia-based game developer ZootFly is apparently very serious in their announcement today of a new game starring one of the greatest men of all time . . .Mr. T. Yep, the bad boxer in Rocky III and the gruff but lovable B.A. on the A-Team TV series will star in a series of "over-the-top adrenaline-pumping action " games.

The games themselves are based on the Mr. T comic book license from Mohawk Media. ZootFly says the first game will feature the man who makes us feel pity " . . . take on Nazis and their gigantic machines in the varied universe of South American rain forests, lost ancient cities, industrial complexes and contemporary military installations." Perhaps the oddest thing about this press release is that ZootFly claims that a fictional version Sims and Spore creator Will Wright will also appear in the game.

Their press release states, " In this universe, Will Wright is not a top-notch game designer but a top-notch American geneticist who was kidnapped and coerced to work on a diabolic plan. Mr. T and Will Wright will join forces to annihilate the Nazis and their hardware." Well of course they do. We plan to contact Will Wright to find of if he has given his approval for this move. No release date for the game was announced.

Brash Entertainment facing lawsuits from ex-developers

We saw this coming a mile away. Following word last week that 18 month old game publisher Brash Entertainment had basically shut its doors, Variety is now reporting that two of the company's third party developers are suing Brash to get back money they say are owed by the publisher. One is 7 Studios, who worked on the close-to-release Six Flags Fun Park and also another game based on an upcoming animated movie 9.

The other studio suing Brash is Zootfly, perhaps best known for a game it would never make; a proof-of-concept idea for a Ghostbusters game that was famously shown on the Internet via a Youtube video but then got "Foxed" by Sony because of their own plans for a Ghostbusters title. Zootfly apparently worked on a game based on the TV show Prison Break for Brash but now says Brash owes them $748,000 for their work. Brash CEO Mitch Davis has not commented on the lawsuits.
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