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Crosmando: SOF reminds me of how sterilized modern FPS games are these days. For all the people whining about violence in video games, we're yet to see a FPS with real proper gibbing, blowing off legs, arms, of parts of arms and legs and other body parts. SOF2 even had the ability to blow apart a part of an enemies' head so you just had a chunk taken out of the skull/brain.

Brutal DOOM is probably the goriest game ever.
Left for Dead 2 had a fairly good damage model which was more impressive than the slightly better than scripted 'director' which they went on about.
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Spectre: Left for Dead 2 had a fairly good damage model which was more impressive than the slightly better than scripted 'director' which they went on about.
Actually, that's another point I'll make. Developers using zombies as the excuse for gore because they're afraid/too timid to depict gory violence against human beings.
Raven's games are split all to hell.

Cyclones & Necrodome are likely owned by Ubisoft.

Heretic, Hexen, Deathkings and Hexen 2 are owned by Zenimax.

Heretic 2, Hexen 2's expansion, SoF and Singularity are owned by Activision.

ShadowCaster is likely owned by EA.

Mageslayer might be owned by Atari.

I have no idea who might own Take No Prisoners. Also Wolfenstein 2009 is nowhere to be seen, so I suspect Zenimax and Activision are talking about that one.

Fun stuff.
Post edited June 25, 2013 by Fuzzyfireball
This Wikipedia article makes me think Take No Prisoners publishing rights might be at Ubisoft.

"Heretic 2, Hexen 2's expansion, SoF and Singularity are owned by Activision."

What makes you say this about Heretic 2 and Hexen 2's expansion? Also aren't you forgetting Soldier of Fortune magazine in the SoF case?

"Heretic, Hexen, Deathkings and Hexen 2 are owned by Zenimax."

Technically by id Software, but they are in turn owned by Zenimax so the ultimate decision makers are the same. But this MIGHT make a difference in so far as intermediate decision makers are concerned and interal politics at Zenimax.

"Also Wolfenstein 2009 is nowhere to be seen, so I suspect Zenimax and Activision are talking about that one. "

The Wolfenstein franchise belongs to id Software(hence ultimately under the control of Zenimax as you correctly note), in fact id Software LLC just filed some new Wolfenstein related trademark applications(likely in connection with the new Wolfenstein game, Wolfenstein: New Order in development at Machinegames. However Activision published Wolfenstein 2009.

There is no specific reason to think that anyone else has those publishing rights. Unlike what some think(not accusing you of this misunderstanding, but I have seen it on the net) publishing rights don't automatically come along for ride so to speak when a development studio gets bought.

Publishing rights already signed away, need to be bought back in seperately negotiated deals between the acquiring company and those publishers, like Zenimax did with EA in the case of Rage. The Rage franchise never belonged to EA, id owned it so Zenimax got it as part of the deal when they acquired id. However the publishing rights were EA's. If Zenimax had wanted to they could have carried on the with the id-EA partnership. Such things happen all the time. However they opted to negotiate a buy back of the publishing rights with EA.

Similarly they ended up with the publishing rights for Quake 4 for Steam and Xbox 360(XBLA?). But I believe that may have been related to some contract expiration thing. Some like that happened with some XBLA/PSN game in an id franchise recently too.

So sure they may be interested in such a deal with Activision concerning Wolfenstein 2009 too, but until there any indications of anything else, we must assume that Activision Publishing Inc(a wholly owned subsidiary of Activision-Blizzard Inc) is the publisher of Wolfenstein 2009.

Publishing agreements are complicated things. As are Asset Purchase Agreements.
Those games would actually be instabuy if I eventually had some money.