Saffire (company) explained

Saffire
Former Name:Cygnus Multimedia Productions (1993–1995)
Type:Private
Industry:Video games
Fate:Dissolved
Founded: in Orem, Utah, US
Hq Location City:South Jordan, Utah
Hq Location Country:US
Num Employees:120
Num Employees Year:2001

Saffire was an American video game developer based in South Jordan, Utah. Founded as Cygnus Multimedia Productions in 1993 by Les Pardew and Charles Moore, it was originally based in Pardew's basement in Orem with a team of six people. Pardew bought out Moore's share in 1994 and involved Hal Rushton as a partner in Moore's place. Cygnus was renamed Saffire in October 1995 and moved from Pleasant Grove to American Fork shortly thereafter for further expansion. Saffire became defunct in 2007.

History

Saffire was founded by Leslie W. ("Les") Pardew with assistance by Charles Moore in 1993. The team initially consisted of six people working from Pardew's basement in Orem, Utah, and expanded to fourteen when it was incorporated in November 1993. The company was named Cygnus Multimedia Productions, taking the name from mythological king Cycnus of Liguria "because it sounded cool" and started out by creating artwork for video games of other developers.

In 1994, Pardew bought out Moore's stake in the company and brought on Hal Rushton, the former "vice president of product development" for Sculptured Software, as a partner. Rushton became the company's general manager, with Pardew as the president. By February 1995, Cygnus employed 50 people in a bottom-floor office in Pleasant Grove; the office was small, wherefore staff worked in shifts, and frequently flooded during rainfall. Cygnus changed its name to Saffire in October 1995 and moved to a new studio in the Utah Valley Business Park in American Fork later that year. The move allowed Saffire to engage in the full production of video games, which Pardew sought to fasten with continued expansion. To raise capital, Pardew borrowed from Utah Technology Finance Corp. (UTFC) in September 1996 and further in March 1997.

Rushton became the company's president by December 1997, while Pardew assumed the role of chief executive officer. Saffire settled in expanded offices in Pleasant Grove in January 1999. By that time, Mark Kendell had become the company's chairman. Saffire continued to expand, with 80 employees in December 1999 and 120 employees in July 2001, the latter while based in American Fork.

In March 2007, Saffire (at the time based in South Jordan) was developing Cryptid Hunter, then scheduled for release in 2008. However, Saffire went out of business later that year.

Games developed

TitlePublisher(s)Platform(s)Release date
HardBall '95AccoladeSega Genesis
Wayne Gretzky and the NHLPA All-StarsTime Warner InteractiveSNES
Nester's Funky BowlingNintendoVirtual Boy
The SuitSoftKey MultimediaMicrosoft Windows, MS-DOS
They Call Me... The SkulSoftKey Multimedia, The Learning CompanyMicrosoft Windows, MS-DOS
NFL Legends Football '98AccoladeMicrosoft Windows
James Bond 007NintendoGame Boy
Rampage World TourMidway GamesNintendo 64
Bio F.R.E.A.K.S.Midway GamesNintendo 64, PlayStation
Oddworld AdventuresGT InteractiveGame Boy
ASC GamesPlayStation
Blizzard EntertainmentMicrosoft Windows, Mac OS
Top Gear Rally 2KemcoNintendo 64
Tom Clancy's Rainbow SixRed Storm EntertainmentNintendo 64
Billy Bob's Huntin'-n-Fishin'Midway GamesGame Boy Color
Titus SoftwareNintendo 64
Oddworld Adventures 2GT InteractiveGame Boy Color
The Mask of ZorroSunsoftGame Boy Color
CyberTigerElectronic ArtsNintendo 64
ESPN MLS GameNightKonamiPlayStation
Midway GamesDreamcast
Microsoft Pinball ArcadeClassified Games (U.S.), Cryo Interactive (PAL)Game Boy Color
Microsoft: The Best of Entertainment PackClassified Games (U.S.), Cryo Interactive (PAL)Game Boy Color
Red Storm EntertainmentPlayStation
Lego SoftwareGame Boy Advance
Lego SoftwareMicrosoft WindowsCanceled in October 2001
NewKidCoGame Boy Color
BarbarianTitus SoftwarePlayStation 2
Hot Wheels Velocity XTHQGame Boy Advance
Midway GamesGame Boy Advance
The HobbitSierra EntertainmentGame Boy Advance
Atari InteractiveGame Boy Advance
Van HelsingVivendi Universal GamesPlayStation 2, Xbox, Game Boy Advance
Around the World in 80 DaysHip GamesGame Boy Advance
ThunderbirdsVivendi Universal GamesGame Boy Advance

External links