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Caen: Interplay Offered Bethesda Fallout MMO Rights For $50M

Fallout 3 developer Bethesda turned down a proposition to pay $50 million for the full Fallout IP, including rights to an MMO, according to Interplay president Eric Caen.

Kris Graft, Contributor

October 22, 2010

2 Min Read
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Fallout 3 developer Bethesda turned down a proposition to pay $50 million for the full Fallout IP, including rights to an MMO, according to an Edge magazine interview with Interplay president Eric Caen. Currently, Bethesda owns the rights to everything Fallout except a disputed deal over the MMO spinoff, in development at Interplay, the previous owner of the license. Bethesda ended up paying $5.75 million for the RPG property in 2007, and turned the dormant PC franchise into a blockbuster multiplatform hit. Eric Caen said his brother, Interplay CEO Herve Caen, initiated verbal negotiations with Bethesda over the rights of the Fallout IP. "My brother said: 'If you want the full IP, the value of it is $50 million,'" according to Eric. "[Bethesda] said: 'No way. Why $50 million?' We said: 'Because the MMOG strength of this universe is huge.' Bethesda said: 'We don’t want that. Let’s buy everything else but the MMOG. Do the MMOG.'" Along with the $5.75 million non-MMO Fallout deal, the two companies signed off on an agreement for the MMO -- Bethesda required Interplay to secure $30 million within 24 months of the deal's signing date to fund development of the MMO, or else the license would be terminated. The agreement also required Interplay to launch the game within four years of signing. Any violation of the MMO agreement would mean the rights to the MMO would revert to Bethesda. Eric claimed that Bethesda counted on Interplay being unable to meet the stipulations of the MMO licensing agreement. "But Interplay did," he said. Bethesda did not agree, and the studio filed suit against Interplay in September 2009 for breach of contract. Litigation over the issue is still ongoing. Eric said, "...All the litigation is about that. I think Bethesda, off the back of Fallout 3’s success, realized that Herve was probably right about the value. They said: 'OK, how can we get that without paying?'" Bethesda said it has no comment on Eric's recounting of the negotiations. The Interplay president also said that development of the Fallout MMO, formerly known under the codename Project V13, is currently under development by a team of 90 people who are working towards a 2012 release. "Even in January 2009, you were already able to move across the [MMO's] world," said Eric. He added that Bethesda's "...Fallout 3 was a little bit too serious -- that’s definitely not where we’re going. Our Fallout MMOG will be extremely funny."

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2010

About the Author

Kris Graft

Contributor

Kris Graft is publisher at Game Developer.

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