Curt Schilling’s $150 Million Fail Shows What’s Broken in Video Games – Bloomberg Businesweek (2021)

TITLE
Curt Schilling’s $150 Million Fail Shows What’s Broken in Video Games

AUTHOR
Jason Schreier

PUBLICATION
Bloomberg Businessweek

YEAR
2021

ARTICLE TYPE
Book Excerpt

FROM THE ARTICLE
38 Studios was the type of company a teenager might dream up when fantasizing about what it’d be like to make video games for a living. The company was building a wildly ambitious game to compete with the megahit World of Warcraft and appeared to be flush with cash. Employees received top-notch health benefits, gym memberships, and personalized high-end gaming laptops worth thousands of dollars. There were free meals, lavish travel expenses, and Timbuk2 bags customized with an illustration of the world map for their in-progress video game, code-named Copernicus. The man behind 38 Studios was Curt Schilling, the retired pitcher best known for his time with the Boston Red Sox. Schilling was a legend, famous for his performance on the field and his combativeness off it. In the 2004 playoffs, he’d pitched two games with an ankle that had been injured so badly it soaked his sock in blood. The performance helped the team win its first World Series in almost a century, and Schilling’s bloody socks earned a place in baseball lore.

COMPANIES MENTIONED
38 Studios

GAMES MENTIONED
Project Copernicus

PEOPLE MENTIONED
Curt Schilling

TOPICS MENTIONED
Canceled Games

ALTERNATE LINK
Archived Copy @ Internet Archive

EXCERPTED FROM
Press Reset: Ruin and Recovery in the Video Game Industry

SEE ALSO
A look inside BioShock Infinite’s troubled development – Polygon (2021)