Buzz Monkey Software

Buzz Monkey Software is an American video game developer based in Eugene, Oregon. Buzz Monkey was formed in late 2001 by four former Dynamix employees: senior producer Randy Thompson, senior engineers Jon Milnes and Steve Cordon, and lead artist Barry Drew.

Buzz Monkey Software
TypeSubsidiary of Zynga
IndustryVideo games
Founded2001
HeadquartersEugene, Oregon, USA
Key people
Randy Thompson
Jon Milnes
Steve Cordon
Barry Drew
OwnerZynga
Number of employees
55
ParentZynga

It was acquired by Zynga in 2012, becoming Zynga Eugene.

History

Buzz Monkey got its start by developing and co-developing licensed property games for the PlayStation 2 and PC systems for publishers such as Simon & Schuster Interactive, Wild Tangent, Vivendi Universal Games, Midway Games, and Sony Computer Entertainment. Buzz Monkey also provided online game lobby development for developer Insomniac Games for PlayStation 2 titles, Ratchet: Deadlocked and Ratchet & Clank: Up Your Arsenal.

In June 2006, publisher Eidos Interactive released Tomb Raider: Legend, an action title developed by Buzz Monkey for the PlayStation Portable (PSP). Later that year in November 2006, American publisher Electronic Arts released NFL Street 3, an arcade-style football title developed by Buzz Monkey for the PlayStation 2 and PSP. NFL Street 3 won "Best Alternative Sports Game" of 2006 from IGN.[1]

In June 2007, Eidos Interactive released another Buzz Monkey title, Tomb Raider: Anniversary, for the PlayStation 2 and PSP, which was co-developed with Crystal Dynamics.[2] Later that year, Eidos Interactive released the Buzz Monkey-developed Nintendo Wii and Xbox 360 versions of Tomb Raider: Anniversary.

In November 2008, Eidos Interactive published the Buzz Monkey developed title Tomb Raider Underworld for the Wii. Buzz Monkey also provided animation and programming support to Crystal Dynamics for the development of the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 versions of that same game.

On June 4, 2012, the company was acquired by Zynga.[3]

Titles

The developer had also worked on an unreleased video game version of a South Park video game for the original Xbox.[5]

References

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