EA Pacific

http://dbpedia.org/resource/EA_Pacific an entity of type: Thing

EA Pacific (formerly known as Burst Studios and Westwood Pacific) was a developer formally owned by Virgin Interactive's North American operations, and was based in Irvine, California. Burst Studios was beset by production problems during its early years; Virgin Interactive's president of worldwide publishing, Brett W. Sperry, commented in 1997, "The way the Burst studio was structured made a lot of sense on paper, but for a variety of reasons, it wasn't delivering product at the end of the day." Burst Studios was acquired by Electronic Arts together with Westwood Studios and Virgin's North American publishing operations in August 1998. The company was later renamed to Westwood Pacific, under that name, the company developed or co-developed games like Nox and Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 rdf:langString
rdf:langString EA Pacific
rdf:langString EA Pacific
rdf:langString EA Pacific
xsd:integer 16980451
xsd:integer 1092678897
xsd:integer 2003
rdf:langString Dissolved, operation merged into EA Los Angeles
xsd:integer 1995
rdf:langString Electronic Arts
rdf:langString Westwood Studios
rdf:langString EA Pacific (formerly known as Burst Studios and Westwood Pacific) was a developer formally owned by Virgin Interactive's North American operations, and was based in Irvine, California. Burst Studios was beset by production problems during its early years; Virgin Interactive's president of worldwide publishing, Brett W. Sperry, commented in 1997, "The way the Burst studio was structured made a lot of sense on paper, but for a variety of reasons, it wasn't delivering product at the end of the day." Burst Studios was acquired by Electronic Arts together with Westwood Studios and Virgin's North American publishing operations in August 1998. The company was later renamed to Westwood Pacific, under that name, the company developed or co-developed games like Nox and Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2. It was later renamed to EA Pacific. Some actual Westwood Studios employees were still working with the studio. One of the senior modelers, who worked on Command & Conquer (1995), was part of the Command & Conquer: Generals (2003) team. EA Pacific was absorbed into EA Los Angeles in 2003. Some employees then went to Petroglyph Games.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4055
rdf:langString Dissolved, operation merged intoEA Los Angeles
xsd:gYear 1995

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