- Brøderbund
Infobox Defunct Company
company_name = Brøderbund Software
company_logo =
slogan =
fate = Defunct (purchased by "The Learning Company")
successor =The Learning Company
foundation = 1980
defunct = 1999 & 2003
location = Eugene,Oregon
San Rafael,California
Novato,California
key_people =Doug Carlston
Gary Carlston
Cathy Carlston Brisbois
Edmund Auer
products =Computer Games Brøderbund Software was an American maker of
computer game s,educational software and "The Print Shop " productivity tools. It was best known as the original creator and publisher of the popular "Carmen Sandiego " games. The company was founded inEugene, Oregon , but moved toSan Rafael, California , and later toNovato, California . Brøderbund was purchased byThe Learning Company in 1998.Etymology and pronunciation
The word "brøderbund" is not an actual word in any language, but is a somewhat loose translation of "band of brothers" into a mixture of Swedish, Danish and German. The Danish/Norwegian
ø was used simply because it looks like the zero onmainframes terminals and earlypersonal computers (Ø – theslashed zero ).Fact|date=April 2008Internally during the 1980s the company's name was pronounced "BRU-der-bund" by employees instead of the publicly used "BRO-der-bund", echoing its semi-Nordic rootsFact|date=April 2008, although in Danish, the vowel would sound roughly like the long u in "hurt".
Products
Brøderbund scored an early hit with the game "Galactic Empire", written by Doug Carlston for the
TRS-80 . The company went on to become a powerhouse in the educational and entertainment software markets with titles like "Fantavision ", "Choplifter ", "Apple Panic ", "Lode Runner ", "Karateka", "Wings of Fury ", "Prince of Persia ", "In the 1st Degree ", "The Last Express ", "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? ", and "Myst ", which stayed in the top 10 list of home computer games for years.Brøderbund was easily one of the most dominant publishers in the computer market of the 1980s, having released
video games for virtually all major computer systems in theU.S. This included not only the popular IBM PC-DOSpersonal computer , but also the leadinghome computers from the decade, notably theTRS-80 , theApple II (for which their first title wasTank Command , written by the third Carlston brother, ProfessorDonal Carlston ), theCommodore 64 , theAtari 8-bit and theAmiga . The company even went on licensing some of its titles toEurope an andJapan ese companies who ported Brøderbund's games to the different home computers of these regions, such as theAmstrad CPC , theMSX and theZX Spectrum .Brøderbund also published the "
Print Shop " series of desktopgreeting card making programs,Family Tree Maker (a genealogy program supported by hundreds of CDs of public genealogy data) and3D Home Architect , a program for designing and visualizing family homes. By the end of the 1980s, games represented only a few percent of Brøderbund's annual sales, which by then were heavily focused in the productivity arena and early education and learning areas.Just before being acquired by
The Learning Company , Brøderbund spun off its popularLiving Books series by forming a joint venture withRandom House Publishing . Despite the success and quality of the Living Books series the joint venture was marginally successful and was dissolved withThe Learning Company deal.For a short period of time, Brøderbund was involved in the
video game console market when they published a few games for theNintendo Entertainment System (NES), but all of their NES games, including their own franchises "Lode Runner ", "Spelunker" and "Raid on Bungeling Bay ", were developed by third-party Japanese companies. Brøderbund also developed and marketed an ill-fated NES controller device called theU-Force , which was operated without direct physical contact between the player and the device. They also published some titles that were produced by companies that didn't have a North American subsidiary, such as Compile's "The Guardian Legend ", Imagineer's "The Battle of Olympus " or "Legacy of the Wizard ", the fourth installment inNihon Falcom 's "Dragon Slayer " series.Brøderbund also briefly had a board game division, which published Don Carlston's
Personal Preference , along with several board game versions of their popular computer games.Corporate history
Brøderbund was founded by brothers Doug and
Gary Carlston in 1980 for the purpose of marketing "Galactic Empire", a computer game that Doug Carlston had created in 1979. Their sister, Cathy, joined the company a year later. Before founding the company, Doug was alawyer and Gary had held a number of jobs, including teaching Swedish at an Americancollege .In 1984, Brøderbund took over the assets of the well-regarded but financially-troubled
Synapse Software . Although intending to keep it running as a business, they were unable to make money from Synapse's products, and closed it down after a year.Brøderbund became a public company in 1991 (their NASDAQ symbol, no longer operative, was BROD). Their stock price and market capitalization climbed steadily to a maximum of nearly USD$80/share in late 1995, and then fell steadily in the face of continued losses for a number of years.
Brøderbund was purchased by
The Learning Company in 1998 for about USD$420 million in stock. Ironically, Brøderbund had initially attempted to purchase the original The Learning Company in 1995, but was outbid by Softkey, who purchased The Learning Company for $606 million in cash and then adopted its name. In a move to rationalize costs, The Learning Company promptly terminated 500 employees at Brøderbund the same year, representing 42% of the company's workforce. Then in 1999 the combined company was bought byMattel for $3.6 billion. Mattel reeled from the financial impact of this transaction, andJill Barad , the CEO, ended up being forced out in a climate of investor outrage. Mattel then actually gave away The Learning Company in September 2000 toGores Technology Group , a private acquisitions firm, for a share of whatever Gores could obtain by selling the company. In 2001, Gores sold The Learning Company's entertainment holdings toUbisoft , and most of the other holdings, including the Brøderbund name, to Irish companyRiverdeep . Currently, all of Brøderbund's games, such as the "Myst" series, are published byUbisoft .Broderbund, with an o instead of the 'ø' character, is now the brand name for Riverdeep's graphic design, productivity, and
edutainment titles, such as "The Print Shop ", "Carmen Sandiego ", "Mavis Beacon ", the Living Books series, and "Reader Rabbit " titles, and also publishes software for other companies, notablyZone Labs ' "ZoneAlarm".ee also
*
Creative Wonders
*Lauren Elliott Co-Creator ofCarmen Sandiego External links
* [http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.broderbund.com/ Archive of Broderbund website]
* [http://www.classicgaming.com/gotcha/broderbund.htm History of Brøderbund] at Classicgaming.com
* [http://www.mobygames.com/company/brderbund-software-inc Profile] atMobyGames
* [http://www.the-underdogs.info/company.php?id=69 Brøderbund profile at Home of the Underdogs]
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