Trending
Opinion: How will Project 2025 impact game developers?
The Heritage Foundation's manifesto for the possible next administration could do great harm to many, including large portions of the game development community.
Featured Blog | This community-written post highlights the best of what the game industry has to offer. Read more like it on the Game Developer Blogs or learn how to Submit Your Own Blog Post
Take a peek inside the culture of Molten Games, a AAA start-up video game developer based in San Diego. After a wonderful year Molten had to shut down due to funding issues. This blog is a requiem to the amazing studio and a tribute to its team.
Note: This post is about my experiences at Molten Games, a San Diego based game development studio. If you have objections to any materials posted here, please let me know and I’ll remove them.
Original post: http://vertigoart.wordpress.com/2014/04/06/requiem-for-molten-games/
It all started about a year ago, around the time when it became painfully obvious that my project at the time will not be able to raise funding it needed to go into production. The day was more stressful than usual when I received a phone call from my friend Blaine Smith. He started with some small talk, but I impatiently interrupted him…. “What’s all this about? Let’s get to the point.” That’s when he told me he was starting a new company in San Diego and whether I wanted to join in…. After a quick lunch with Blaine and John Fitzgerald (aka “Fitz”, the Art Director), I was sold on the idea. There was no office, no computers, no email, no WIKI, no employees – just the game idea and a pitch video Fitz put together. We were to build the company from ground up.
Blunderbuss original pitch video (screenshot)
Over the next few months I learned everything there is to learn about recruiting. I’ve scoured through LinkedIn, sent countess in-mails and talked to many candidates over the phone. Heck, I’ve even started using ATS. At first, it was very difficult. How do you convince a server engineer to join when you are interviewing him at a restaurant in Pasadena instead of an office in San Diego? How about interviewing 3D modelers in the hotel lobbies? But somehow we did it. There was something great about the idea and the people at Molten that attracted industry’s best developers. One by one, Molteneers began to assemble.
Our first in-person company meeting at Hyatt, La Jolla
Working from homes and hotels was exciting for a while, but everyone sighed with relief when we finally moved into an office. Nothing beats working side by side with creative people. Thanks to Unreal 4 we had multi-player going within a month. Our artists built art for our first few units. The miracle of building the game has begun.
Sprint 2 review meeting at the new office. True story – we tripped the circuit breakers at that office every time we had a playtest. Too much awesome?
After a few months we had outgrown the space and moved into a larger open-floor office with an ocean view. Somewhere along the way something wonderful happened to Molteneers. From a set of distinct individuals they turned into the most tightly knit team I’ve ever seen.
Blaine once told us a story about how he was banned from the game he was previously working on as a practical joke by his co-workers. They gave him a pair of glorious granny panties with “Banned ’08″ inscription to commemorate the occasion. Now, how could we resist not to pull the same prank on him again? :)
Our CEO was working remotely from Korea for a while… this is how we said “Hello” when he came for a visit…
This is how we welcomed our CEO Jungwon (aka JW)
This is how we said “Congrats on graduating!” to our amazing intern Gennaro (nickname DiGiorno because I could not remember his name when he just started…. I’m old!)…
Congrats DiGiorno!!!
During the Halloween we had what we’ve called “Molympics” – a championship where teams compete in a series of games (Mortal Combat, Trivia, Toss the Bag, Foosball) to win a trophy.
Epic Tennis Match
Halloween 2013
I think it wan’t easy for anyone… for girls to have to see all the facial hair every day, and for guys not to shave it off.
Movemeber 2013
Congrats to the winner of Movember 2013 and the owner of the most epic mustache ever!
We had the most amazing Holiday Party at the Legoland Hotel.
Lego Logo
Happy Holidays, Molteneers!
Secret Santa! Some gifts are more awkward than others….
Raul was pretty excited about his gift :)
Paul made coffee once. ONCE.
Don’t ever let Paul make coffee… WAY TOO STRONG.
The entire studio competed in Blunderbuss championship.
Nothing could stop these guys…
A commemorative trophy for me for breaking the build. We never ended up using this for anyone else… :)
Let the nerf war begin!
We had an amazing number of musicians at the company. As I absolutely love live music, this made me so very happy! Now if I could only convince Yong to deliver on his promise to sing…
There was Lavashark…
The Lavashark was Molten’s mascot. It came out during Sprint reviews to try the martinis :)
At the end of every Sprint we got together as a team to review progress. We watched the videos displaying concept art, gameplay, new platform tools and telemetry graphs; we cheered each other’s accomplishments and discussed our goals for the next Sprint.
Sprint Review Meeting
Sprint Review Meeting
It’s impossible to show everything that happened in the past year in just one blog post. There were countless games of Mortal Combat, Foosball, Table Tennis and Darts. There were potlucks, chili cook-offs, birthday cakes and unexpected doughnuts and cupcakes. We watched movies together, went on hikes, had lunches and dinners, and drinks together. Probably too many drinks. We’ve had a few Molten babies born that year – we welcomed them with gifts purchased by the team. We had board games nights and fantasy football nights. We went to see Padres games and Chargers games. We became friends.
It took the team about 8 months to build the game. It was a complete Vertical Slice with an installer, patcher, back-end platform (multiplayer, basic matchmaker, persistence, monitoring, telemetry), back-end administration tools, automated deployments, automated test framework, gameplay systems, UI, and of course content – multiple champions and a beautiful map.
It took a lot of hard work. We were agile, we constantly adjusted our goals, re-scoped the deliverables and maintained extreme focus on the goals.
In terms of what we were able to accomplish, I consider Molten to be a profound success.
Before you could play the game, you had to agree to the EULA. Our legal team was not too happy with the wording…
Blunderbuss EULA v1
And this is the cinematic video for the game itself!
On Monday, March 24th, just about a year since I started, a company meeting was called. Visibly shaken founders stood in front of the team and with tears in their eyes delivered the news. We’ve lost our funding unexpectedly and the studio had to shut down. That was the end.
The team stood silent for a while. Then there were hugs and tears. The team had to leave the office by noon so almost everyone went to lunch together (ironically, we hit the “Rock Bottom” bar). Almost everyone showed up at the office the next day. And the day after. And the day after that. They came to show support for each other, share leads for jobs and just hang out with each other. They were an embodiment of what it means TO BE A TEAM.
The last post on our suggestion board. One star = one vote.
Molten and all Molteneers will always have a special place in my heart. We’ve accomplished so much. It was the best year of my life and I would have done it again in a heartbeat.
I will miss you.
You May Also Like