Software Creations

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

Revision as of 08:49, 12 October 2022 by SuperMax124 (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "'''Logo''':" to "'''Logo:'''")


Background

Software Creations was a British game developer that was established in 1987. They are primarily known for their video games based on movie and comic licenses like Marvel Comics (Spider-Man and X-Men - Arcade's Revenge, Spider Man and Venom - Maximum Carnage and it's sequel, Separation Anxiety), Cutthroat Island, Disney's Beauty and the Beast (Belle's Quest and Roar of the Beast) and original titles like Solstice and its sequel Equinox. In May 2002, Acclaim Entertainment bought most of Software Creations' assets and renamed it to "Acclaim Studios Manchester". The only games they did under that name around that time were Gladiator: Sword of Vengeance and the GBA version of All-Star Baseball 2004. In 2004, it was closed along with Acclaim Studios Cheltenham during Acclaim's bankruptcy.

1st Logo (1992-1994)

Nicknames: "The Three Multicolored Arrows", "The Software Creations Arrows"

Logo: 3 arrow shapes, all overlapping each other with them colored (from the top to bottom layers) blue, green, and red, are seen pointing towards the northwest direction and having some definition to them. To the right of them is "SOFTWARE CREATIONS", stacked on top of each other in a bold white font with a visible drop shadow.

Variants:

  • On Spider-Man and X-Men - Arcade's Revenge, the text appears alongside the copyright without the arrows, which slide in one-by-one.
  • Some games have the arrows shown without any shading.

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: The opening theme of the game.

Availability: Uncommon. Seen on Equinox, Super Off-Road (for SNES) and Spider-Man and X-Men - Arcade's Revenge (for Genesis and SNES). It also appeared on Rock n' Roll Racing and Ken Griffey Jr presents Major League Baseball for SNES as well (the latter shown after the ending credits). The Game Gear version of latter game, however, has the next logo below instead.


2nd Logo (1994-1997)

Nicknames: "The Eye", "The Software Creations Eye"

Logo: On a white background, there are 3 arc pieces, which have different textures and shapes, forming an abstract eye. The left one has a blue carpet-like texture, while the right small one has a dark blue wall-like texture and the right big one has a brown magma-like texture. Around it is a marble which is used for the pupil. Under the logo are the words "SOFTWARE CREATIONS" in a weird serif looking font with cut off parts (with orange circles on the "F" and two "E"s, while the "I" has an orange oval above it and has a green outline) and the inside part of the "O"s tilted.

Variants:

  • On Foreman for Real, the logo is against the marble background with its shadow behind it. Also, the slogan, "catalyst for the imagination" is underneath the logo.
  • On the Nintendo 64 version of Hexen, the logo (with the slogan intact) is seen on the bottom right with the game's title logo on the top-left. Plus, the text is a bit smaller and the eye design looks more realistic.
  • On the SNES versions of Spider-Man and Venom: Maximum Carnage and its sequel, Separation Anxiety, the circle in the "E" is gray and the oval above the "I" is half gray. This might be due to a graphical glitch.
  • On the Game Boy version of Foreman for Real, the logo is in its print style inside a black rectangle. Above it are the stacked words "DESIGNED AND PROGRAMMED BY SOFTWARE CREATIONS".

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: None or the opening theme of the game.

Availability: Common. Seen on games through the era such as Spider-Man and Venom: Maximum Carnage and its sequel, Separation Anxiety, Foreman for Real, The Tick, Spider-Man and X-Men - Arcade's Revenge (Game Gear version only, as the other versions use the previous logo), Cutthroat Island (Game Gear version only, as the other versions never had a logo), Game Boy and Game Gear versions of Mortal Kombat 3 (the latter version was never released in the USA), and Hexen for Nintendo 64.


3rd Logo (1998-2002)


Nickname: "The Rainbow-Colored Marbles"

Logo: On a white background, there is the brushstroke text "Creations" in the Treefrog font (with the customized C) with a visible 3D effect and a multi-colored gradient flowing throughout it. Underneath the logo are 7 orbs, each in a different color (colored red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, and pink, from left to right), that are skewered by a disjointed black line.

Variants:

  • An animated variant exists. On a black background, the text "Creations", now colored white, is carved into the background with light coming out of it. After it cuts through multiple camera angles, the 7 colored orbs zoom out under it, the line gets drawn, and the logo tilts and rotates into position.
  • On Wayne Gretzky's 3D Hockey '98 for PS1 (the first game to use this logo), the logo has a spotlight over it and also includes a credit for the development team, Violent Fish, in the corner.
  • The Rugrats Movie has the logo stuck to the top of the screen in monochrome, while credits for the developers appear below it. If the game is played on a Game Boy Color, however, the orbs are colored.

FX/SFX: CGI animation.

Music/Sounds: None. The animated version has a whirling white noise sweeping down, and blips play when the orbs zoom out.

Availability: Rare. It's seen on Wayne Gretzky's 3D Hockey '98 (PS1), The Rugrats Movie, Carmageddon 64, Rugrats: Time Travelers, Boarder Zone, NASCAR 2000 (GBC), Rugrats in Paris: The Movie, The Simpsons: Night of the Living Treehouse of Horror, and Rugrats: Castle Capers. The animated version is extremely rare and only appears on Nicktoons Racing.


4th Logo (May 7-September 3, 2002)

Logo: 4 shapes (a red line, an orange rectangle, and 2 red/orange squares) are seen forming a stylized "C", in which "creations" can be seen in a white futuristic font.

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Very rare. Seen on the company's last games, All-Star Baseball 2003, The Ripping Friends, and Stuart Little 2, all for the Game Boy Advance.

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