Industry veterans from Riot Games and other studios have raised $37.5 million to launch their Theorycraft Games game studio.
The studio of six people is based in Seattle and Los Angeles, and it is working deep, competitive player-versus-player games.
China’s NetEase led the round, and other investors include NEA, Bitkraft Ventures, Griffin Gaming Partners, Sisu Game Ventures, and a small group of strategic angel investors. It’ll use the capital to recruit diverse and driven talent to the Theorycraft team to develop a community-driven, PvP game available on multiple platforms.
A triple-A team
The leaders once worked at Riot Games, Bungie, Blizzard, and Valve Software. They helped make games such as League of Legends, Halo, Destiny, Overwatch, Valorant, and Team Fortress 2.
Joe Tung, the CEO and Founder of Theorycraft Games, led multiple genre-defining, billion-dollar franchises as the former executive vice president of League of Legends, and he also served as executive producer on Destiny and Halo.
“We want to make deep, 10,000-hour games that are better when you play with your friends,” Tung said in an interview with GamesBeat. “We want to make games that are worthy of being theory crafted by players.”
Theorycraft’s team includes Michael Evans (a former tech lead for Valorant, Overwatch, and Halo) as chief technology officer; former creative director at Bungie, Mike Tipul, as chief creative officer; former art director on Valorant, League of Legends, Dota 2, and Team Fortress 2, Moby Francke, as art director; and former global revenue and finance lead for League of Legends franchise, Areeb Pirani, as chief operating officer.
“When you think about the founding team, we’ve worked on some of the biggest games and intellectual properties in the world,” Tung said. “But building something from scratch is the last frontier. There is always the unscratched itch in the back of your mind, about what you would do if you could go from zero to one.”
A good time to start
It’s a good time to start a game studio, as there are more game-focused venture funds and other game investors than ever. Tung said he was aware of 16 different game studios in Los Angeles with former Riot Games teams.
Simon Zhu, head of investment and partnerships at NetEase Games, said in a statement that Theorycraft’s founders have a strong track record leading some of gaming’s most successful franchises and he is looking forward to what they come up with next given their resources and independence.
Tung said the team liked NetEase because it was willing to “go big with us” and unleash the team with resources.
“They have been true to their word,” Tung said. “When you’re playing the long game, when you’re going for a 1,000-hour game, that’s the only thing that matters, right? Will the players come back to it?”
Moritz Baier-Lentz, a partner at Bitkraft Ventures, said in a statement that making games is both an art and a science, and the best teams are the ones that have a history of success and clarity of concept and creative vision. Baier-Lentz said this is where the leadership team at Theorycraft is second to none.
Ambitious plans
Theorycraft Games is on a mission to create deep games that give everyone the chance to connect, to compete, and to be infinitely delighted by stories that place players directly in the center. Theorycraft plans to meet players where they are, regardless of what platform they play on, where they live, or how much money they can spend.
The company is hiring for a number of positions. Tung said his team was open to hiring people to work remotely, wherever they are available. He said the games Theorycraft is making will be natively multiplatform, and they would operate in a cross-platform way if possible.
Tung left Bungie in 2013 and went to work on League of Legends with a small team that moved fast. He felt that he needed to “scratch that itch” of starting a game company from scratch and there was no better time to start. So he left Riot Games in October and started forming the company with a “huge amount of incredible talent who are willing to take a bet on themselves.”
He said the game industry needs game studios that want to serve players. He doesn’t see as much value in creating a sequel every few years, though he was glad to see Riot Games branch out and start launching new games. Now, at five months, he said the team had a prototype they showed off to streamers and others outside the company.
“We’re building it out in the open and getting lots of feedback,” Tung said.
Tung said he hope the team will be about 30 or 40 people when the first game gets to the market.
“I’m coming from a background of 600 person teams,” Tung said. “We spent a lot of time talking to companies with different models. We spent time talking to the Supercell team, and we were really inspired by the fact they can make their products with 12 people on a team. We think it’s really exciting that there are clear benefits to keeping the core dev team as small as possible.”
But the team will rely on external partners for a variety of capabilities. Tung said he believes that the next Disney will be focused on gaming.
“We think there’s there’s limitless growth and possibility for a company that that just wants to serve players better,” Tung said.
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