It’s a time of great change for the Ottawa gaming company formerly known as Glitchsoft.
The company has a new name, Gigataur, and a new game, “Star Wars Rebels: Recon Missions,” which Disney launched in late March.
Gigataur’s CEO, Andrew Fisher, said it was a testament to his team that the company has advanced to the point it can partner with “the biggest entertainment brand.”
OBJ360 (Sponsored)
What we do BGC Ottawa provides children and youth with a safe place between the realities of home life and the pressures of school — a place of positivity and
What we do The YMCA of the National Capital Region is a charitable association dedicated to igniting the potential in people, helping them grow, lead, and give back to their
“As the CEO, I’d love to say I had a huge part in this. I rubbed some shoulders, I bought some lunches. It really was the team that made this happen,” he said.
Now that the company and its 30 staff have grown to this level, Mr. Fisher and chief creative officer Wes Tam both said a name change was necessary to reflect that.
Mr. Fisher said Glitchsoft was a great independent studio name, but the word “glitch” can have a negative connotation.
“That wasn’t how we were portraying it. Glitches in games are actually quite fun things and people go out of their way to find them,” he said.
Mr. Tam said the company decided on the name Glitchsoft in 2009 because it was edgy and contrary to the mainstream.
“But now we’re working with a lot of triple-A brand partners, including Lucasfilm and Marvel, and again just getting to the table with these clients requires a name that resonates with these companies a little bit more,” he said. Even though the Glitchsoft name is gone, the edge can remain as the company continues pushing boundaries, he added.
Gigataur was a name that resonated with all the founders, Mr. Fisher said.
“It had the roots of the meanings of the words that we liked in terms of they were both creative and powerful,” he said, adding gigataur.com was also available.
Work on the Star Wars project began in September 2013, and the company has tripled in size since then. Mr. Fisher said expansion is “continual,” adding Gigataur is looking at adding other satellite offices, like the one it already has in China, so it can access other critical markets in the mobile world.
The Star Wars project is not a one-shot deal. Mr. Tam said he expects Gigataur will update content in the game over the next year or two.
The Disney partnership will also open doors to more new opportunities to go along with other projects already underway, Mr. Tam and Mr. Fisher said.
“Those are things that we’re tempering because we have to manage our capacity and burnout because there have been a lot of hard hours to get us to this date, but we do, we have a whole bunch of (other opportunities) and we’re starting to figure out which ones we want to prioritize as a team and we will continue to execute on those,” Mr. Fisher said.
“We really have to choose the right one for us. It’s a little hard when you just come off working on your dream project … to choose what’s the next ‘passion’ one we want to go after,” he said. “We are chasing some of those. At the same time, there’s ones that we think might be more strategic.”