The Behemoth
The mascot and logo for The Behemoth | |
Private | |
Industry | Interactive entertainment |
Founded | 2003 |
Founder | Tom Fulp, Dan Paladin, John Baez |
Headquarters | San Diego, California, United States |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | John Baez (President) |
Products |
Alien Hominid Castle Crashers BattleBlock Theater Pit People |
Number of employees | 9[1] (2008) |
Website |
www |
The Behemoth is a video game development company that was created in 2003 by John Baez, artist Dan Paladin, and programmers Tom Fulp, Brandon LaCava, and Nick Dryburgh. Dryburgh and LaCava later left the company. The Behemoth development studio is located in San Diego, California. The company is known for producing simple games with Paladin's signature 2D style.
Their first console game, Alien Hominid, gained critical acclaim by the media and the members of The Behemoth quickly gained status as indie developers focused on bringing old-school styles of video games back into mainstream gaming. Some of the minigames from Alien Hominid were ported to iOS in 2011.
The Behemoth's second game, Castle Crashers, was released August 27, 2008, originally for the Xbox Live Arcade service, eventually re-releasing for the PlayStation 3 on August 31, 2010, and Microsoft Windows/OS X on September 26, 2012. Since its release on Xbox Live Arcade, Castle Crashers has become one of the most downloaded games, with over 2.6 million copies sold as of year-end 2011.
A third title, BattleBlock Theater, was released on April 3, 2013. The Steam version of BattleBlock Theater was released on May 15, 2014.
The Behemoth is currently in development of a turn-based strategy game titled Pit People.
History
During August 2002, Tom Fulp and Dan Paladin collaborated in creating the Flash game Alien Hominid for Newgrounds. The game has since become extremely popular and generated over twenty million hits and rising. Later in the year, Paladin was working on developing a console video game when co-worker Baez approached him. He was a fan of Alien Hominid and asked Paladin if he was interested in developing the game for consoles. When Baez offered to produce the game, Fulp and Paladin eventually agreed, recruited LaCava and Dryburgh, and formed The Behemoth in 2003.
Games
- Alien Hominid (2004) (PlayStation 2, GameCube, Xbox, Game Boy Advance)
- Alien Hominid HD (2007) (Xbox 360)
- Castle Crashers (2008) (Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Microsoft Windows, OS X)
- Super Soviet Missile Mastar (2011) (iOS)
- Alien Hominid: PDA Games (2011) (iOS)
- BattleBlock Theater (2013) (Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux)
- Castle Crashers Remastered (2015) (Xbox One, Microsoft Windows, OS X)
- Pit People (TBA) (Xbox One, Microsoft Windows)
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Behemoth. |