Warner Bros closes three development studios, locks Monolith’s Nemesis system behind patent

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In context: Monolith was founded in 1994 by Bryan Bouwman, Brian Goble, and several others, when when DOS was still the operating system of choice for PC games. Over the years, the studio developed successful series such as Blood, No One Lives Forever, F.E.A.R., Shogo: Mobile Armor Division, and, of course, Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor. Thanks to a sudden “strategic change in direction,” Warner Bros has shuttered the studio.

Warner Bros recently confirmed the closure of three gaming studios, including Middle-earth developer Monolith Productions. The studio is notable for designing a technology capable of providing unique personalities to enemies and NPCs. However, WB “locked” the system away behind a patent, even though it will likely remain unused.

The publisher just confirmed the closure of Monolith Productions, Player First Games, and Warner Bros Games San Diego. Monolith’s most recent fame came from the two action-adventure games based on J. R. R. Tolkien’s Legendarium: Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor and Middle-earth: Shadow of War. Critics praised both titles for the Nemesis system, a technology designed to procedurally generate orc characters featuring unique traits and relationships with the player’s character.

Monolith and Warner Bros invested in the Nemesis system so much that the publisher decided to patent the technology in 2016. The patent describes methods for managing NPCs that can remember previous interactions with the player and react accordingly in subsequent encounters. The patent expires on August 11, 2036, so no other developers can use the Nemesis system, and WB has nothing in the works either.

However, Monolith was working on a Wonder Woman game. It was a single-player experience powered by the Nemesis system. It announced the game in 2021, but the project is dead because of the studio’s shutdown. People in the industry are now praising the unusable Nemesis technology and criticizing Warner for funding the development of a highly advanced AI gaming system and then freezing it for years to come. It sounds like a move right out of Disney’s playbook.

Gaming journalist Scott Robertson noted how Monolith pioneered a one-of-a-kind system for the procedural generation of unique enemy interactions and showed his contempt for Warner Bros actions.

“[A few years later] WB took that from them, patented it, and then closed their studio. Fu** them,” Robertson said.

The closure of Monolith, Player First Games, and Warner Bros. Games San Diego resulted from a very rocky period for WB’s gaming business. Chief Executive and President of Warner’s Global Streaming and Games JB Perrette told Bloomberg that the quality of too many new releases missed the publisher’s expected results. The company took a $200 million loss for the Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League project alone.

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