For a while there, it seemed as if we’d seen the last of the S.T.A.L.K.E.R. series and its pesky punctuation. Since STALKER 2′s cancellation at GSC, with employees from the developer forming Vostok Games and turning their attentions to the similarly post-apocalyptic Survarium, the Zone seemed forever closed. Now, though, word comes through from bitComposer Games that they’ve obtained the STALKER license for further titles in the franchise.
“bitComposer Entertainment AG has acquired the exclusive worldwide rights for future video game adaptations of the acclaimed S.T.A.L.K.E.R. brand from Boris Natanovich Strygatsky,” states the press release, curiously misspelling Boris Strugatsky’s name.
“S.T.A.L.K.E.R. is a reputable brand with a long history of success. To date, the series has sold many millions of units worldwide. Naturally, we’d like to tap into the success of this series, and we see a great deal of potential for the future.”
BitComposer are already familiar with the series, having handled European publishing for STALKER: Call of Pripryat. They also published this year’s Jagged Alliance remake, Back in Action.
The studio claims they will be releasing further details “shortly”.
UPDATE: RPS have spoken to bitComposer, who slightly clarify what’s going on. The suggestion is that the rights are specifically for game adaptations of Strugatsky’s Stalker, presumably meaning the film/book based on Roadside Picnic, a book also by Strugatsky. That would mean that the S.T.A.L.K.E.R. games were still owned by former GSC head Sergei Grigorovich, despite bitComposer specifically using those games’ acronym affectation in their press release.
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