Sports Interactive

Sports Interactive Limited is a British video game developer based in London, best known for the Football Manager series.

Founded by brothers Oliver and Paul Collyer in July 1994, the studio was acquired by Japanese video game publisher Sega in 2006 and became part of Sega Europe. In addition to its work on Football Manager, the studio has also created a number of other sports-management simulations, including NHL Eastside Hockey Manager and Championship Manager Quiz, and is the former developer of Championship Manager.

Sports Interactive Limited
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
Founded1994; 30 years ago (1994)
Founders
Headquarters,
England
Key people
Products
Number of employees
285 (2024)
ParentSega (2006–present)
Websitesigames.com

History

Founded by Paul Collyer and Oliver Collyer, the company is commonly abbreviated to "SI" amongst fans of their games.[citation needed]

In 2003, Sports Interactive split with former publisher Eidos Interactive and signed a deal with Sega to continue their flagship sports franchise under the new name, Football Manager. After the split, both parties kept their intellectual property. Sports Interactive kept the base code, the game database and programming of the game, whilst Eidos kept the rights to the Championship Manager franchise.[citation needed]

On 28 June 2012, Miles Jacobson and Ian Livingstone revealed why they split from Eidos Interactive and joined Sega. In a chat with GameHorizon, Jacobson thought that Beautiful Game Studios was brought in to take over Championship Manager, whilst Livingstone thought that Eidos Interactive brought Beautiful Game Studios to protect the firm in case Sports Interactive jumped ship. Jacobson commented, saying, "I'm sure there are two sides to this story, at the time we felt there was a lack of respect that we did for our work from Eidos. There seemed to be an attitude at the time in the industry that anyone could make games." He continued by saying, "Eidos wanted more control. We wanted more control. We were asking for high royalties. Eidos set up Beautiful Game Studios nine months before Championship Manager 4 was due to come out. They told me that BGS were making a platform game. I thought our number was up."

He then further elaborated by saying, "I went for a curry with the CEO of Sega in Japan and Europe, and he made me an offer on a napkin, I kept telling them we were not for sale. I told them they would have to double the offer for me to even discuss it with Paul and Oliver Collyer."

On 4 April 2006, it was announced that Sega Holdings Europe Ltd, holding company for Sports Interactive's publisher's Sega, had acquired Sports Interactive. When Sega acquired the company, it had 34 employees.

In 2018, Sports Interactive relocated from Old Street in Islington to the Here East development in Stratford. Now occupying half of the first floor in the Press Centre, the studio now has 285 permanent employees in addition to more than 1,400 researchers worldwide for its Football Manager games.

The studio is closely linked with War Child and since 2006 has donated a percentage of each game sale directly to the charity. To date, this initiative has raised a total of more than £1.5m.

The studio has begun developing partnerships with leading football clubs and other organisations in recent years. These include Manchester City, Brighton & Hove Albion, Brentford FC, Burnley FC, Venezia FC and Stormzy's project Merky FC.

Games

Accolades

The Collyers were appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2010 New Year Honours for services to the video game industry. Miles Jacobson was appointed an OBE the following year.

In 2021, Sports Interactive were won a 'Best Places to Work' Award at the GamesIndustry.Biz Best Places to Work Awards. They won the same accolade again in 2023.

In 2022, the studio won the MCV/Develop Legend Award at the 2022 MCV/Develop Awards.

References

Tags:

Sports Interactive HistorySports Interactive GamesSports Interactive AccoladesSports Interactive

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Glass (2019 film)William Adams (pilot)Rita Ora2024 Indian general election in Tamil NaduKnuckles (TV series)Kirsten DunstBMW 1602 Elektro-AntriebKurt RussellBBC World ServiceStormy DanielsJohnny Depp2024 Indian Premier LeagueThe Family StarRobin WilliamsBoy Kills WorldCanelo ÁlvarezArticle 370 of the Constitution of IndiaEva MendesChernobyl disaster3 Body Problem (TV series)KYURArmenian genocideThe Office (American TV series)HozierShaquille O'NealCold War2024 ICC Men's T20 World CupMichael JacksonStephen WarnockChelsea F.C.Civil War (film)Sophia BushSiren (2024 film)Eurovision Song Contest 20242024 Mutua Madrid Open – Men's singlesKim Ji-won (actress)PSV EindhovenDavid PeckerGenghis KhanXXX (film series)Google MapsGeorge VIRishi SunakX (2022 film)Bruno FernandesSalma Hayek2024 AFC Futsal Asian CupKate HudsonDownloadGhoul (Fallout)Brad MarchandJayden Daniels2024 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election2024TaiwanOpinion polling for the 2024 Indian general electionLiam NeesonYandex.Zen2024 Summer OlympicsIsraelList of country calling codes2020 NFL draftRafael NadalStephen CurryI, Robot (film)M. Night ShyamalanMaya RudolphStellar BladeGoogle ScholarIlluminatiX-Men '97Three-body problemLaptop27 ClubGlen PowellRussell WilsonJohn CenaBrad PittKaty Perry🡆 More