Destination Games Explained

Destination Games
Type:Subsidiary
Successor:Portalarium
Former Names:NCSOFT Austin
(2001–2009)
Foundation:Austin, Texas, United States, April 2000
Defunct:2009
Founders:Richard Garriott
Robert Garriott
Starr Long
Location:6801 North Capital of Texas Highway,
Austin, Texas, United States
78731
Fate:Dissolved
Parent:NCSOFT (2001–2009)
Industry:Video games
Products:Tabula Rasa
Homepage:www.destination-games.com

Destination Games was an American computer game development company created in April 2000 by Richard Garriott, Robert Garriott and Starr Long, following their departure from Origin Systems. ("Destination" is a play on "Origin", the company the Garriotts founded nearly two decades earlier.)

Destination was founded in Austin, Texas to develop massively multiplayer online role-playing games. At E3 2001, Richard Garriott announced a partnership making Destination the United States headquarters of South Korean MMORPG giant NCSOFT. As NCSOFT Austin, Destination has mainly focused on developing and supporting the North American version of NCSOFT's Lineage games.

In 2007 Destination Games released its first game, Tabula Rasa, a sci-fi MMORPG. The game did not sell as well as was hoped, Richard Garriott left NCSOFT in 2008,[1] and the game service closed in February 2009. The Destination Games website was taken down when NCsoft moved its United States headquarters from Austin to Seattle—calling it NCSOFT West—in 2008.[2]

NCSOFT Austin employed five people to run the casual MMOG Dungeon Runners, but announced in 2009 that support for this game will be ending in early 2010 due to low subscription numbers.[3] As of October 2009, NCSOFT employs about 150 people in the former Destination Games office in Austin mainly working in server operations, quality assurance, and customer support for various NCSOFT MMO titles, however development operations have moved completely to other NCSSOFT subsidiaries on the West Coast. The trademark Destination Games remains a property of NCSOFT.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Richard Garriott Departs NCSOFT Following Return To Earth . Remo, Chris . 2008-11-12 . Gamasutra.
  2. Web site: NCSOFT moving U.S. base to Seattle . Austin Business Journal . 2008-09-11 . 2009-10-17.
  3. Web site: Things aren't all gloom in the Austin gaming scene . Gaar, Brian . 2009-10-05 . Austin American-Statesman . 2009-10-17 . 2009-10-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091008125445/http://www.statesman.com/business/content/business/stories/technology/2009/10/05/1005plugged.html . dead .