Bethesda Game Studios

Bethesda Game Studios is an American video game developer and a studio of ZeniMax Media based in Rockville, Maryland. It is best known for its action role-playing franchises, including The Elder Scrolls, Fallout, and Starfield. Bethesda Game Studios was established in 2001 as the development unit of Bethesda Softworks, separating from publishing operations. Todd Howard serves as the studio's executive producer, leading it with managing director Ashley Cheng and studio director Angela Browder. As of November 2023, Bethesda Game Studios had 450 employees.[1]

Bethesda Game Studios
Company typeDivision
IndustryVideo games
Founded2001; 23 years ago (2001)
Headquarters,
US
Key people
Products
Number of employees
>450 (2023)
ParentBethesda Softworks
Websitebethesdagamestudios.com

History

Bethesda Game Studios was established in 2001. Previously, Bethesda Softworks, then a developer and publisher, had been reorganized as a subsidiary of ZeniMax Media. ZeniMax's Robert A. Altman sought to grow the development unit, which was spun off from Bethesda Softworks as Bethesda Game Studios, starting out with roughly 40 people.[2][3]

By 2008, Bethesda Game Studios was considered one of the industry's top developers on the reputation of The Elder Scrolls fantasy universe and the critically acclaimed Fallout 3. Bethesda had created a unique role for itself, “spending years to create massive, open-world, single-player RPGs — hardly a booming genre in the industry at large — to great success, bringing a once-niche PC genre to a broad multiplatform audience,” wrote Gamasutra in their year-end best-of list.[4]

In December 2015, Bethesda Game Studios opened a satellite studio in Montreal under the leadership of Yves Lachance, the former head of Behaviour Interactive.[5] In 2018, two ZeniMaxi-owned studios became part of Bethesda Game Studios: BattleCry Studios was renamed Bethesda Game Studios Austin in March, and Escalation Studios was turned into Bethesda Game Studios Dallas in August.[6][7] Microsoft acquired ZeniMax in March 2021.[8][9]

Technology

Satellite studios

  • Bethesda Game Studios Montreal in Montreal, Canada; founded in December 2015.
  • Bethesda Game Studios Austin in Austin, Texas, US; founded as BattleCry Studios, a subsidiary of ZeniMax, in October 2012, and organized as part of Bethesda Game Studios in March 2018.
  • Bethesda Game Studios Dallas in Dallas, Texas, US; founded as Escalation Studios in 2007, acquired by ZeniMax in February 2017, and organized as part of Bethesda Game Studios in August 2018.

Games developed

Bethesda Game Studios has principally been involved in the development of role-playing video games with their The Elder Scrolls and Fallout series for consoles and personal computers, most of which have been commercially and critically successful.[10][11]

In 2015, the studio entered into the mobile gaming market with Fallout Shelter based on the same franchise, which gained 50 million players by mid-2016. In February 2017, Howard said that they are in development of another mobile title following onto the success of Fallout Shelter.[12] This was revealed in 2018 to be The Elder Scrolls: Blades.

In 2016, Howard confirmed that while they are developing The Elder Scrolls VI, it was still a long way to the game's release. Meanwhile, two other significant projects are in development which are expected to be released prior to The Elder Scrolls VI.[13] On May 30, 2018, Fallout 76 was announced.[14] On June 10, 2018, during Bethesda's E3 2018 conference, the other project in development was revealed to be the company's first new intellectual property in 25 years, Starfield. During the 2021 Xbox/Bethesda Games Showcase, Starfield was announced to be releasing exclusively for PC and Xbox Series X/S. Starfield released on September 6, 2023.[15][16] On June 14, 2022, Howard confirmed that Fallout 5 would start development after the completion of The Elder Scrolls VI, with the latter currently in the pre-production phase of development.[17]

YearTitlePlatform(s)
2002The Elder Scrolls III: MorrowindWindows, Xbox
2004IHRA Professional Drag Racing 2005PlayStation 2, Xbox
2006IHRA Drag Racing: Sportsman EditionPlayStation 2, Windows, Xbox
The Elder Scrolls IV: OblivionPlayStation 3, Windows, Xbox 360
2008Fallout 3
2011The Elder Scrolls V: SkyrimNintendo Switch, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S
2015Fallout ShelterAndroid, iOS, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Windows, Xbox One
Fallout 4PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S
2016The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim – Special EditionNintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S
2017The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim VRPlayStation 4, Windows
Fallout 4 VRWindows
2018Fallout 76PlayStation 4, Windows, Xbox One
2020The Elder Scrolls: BladesAndroid, iOS, Nintendo Switch[18]
2023The Elder Scrolls: CastlesAndroid[19]
StarfieldWindows, Xbox Series X/S
TBAThe Elder Scrolls VITBA

Expansion packs

YearTitleGamePlatform(s)
2002TribunalThe Elder Scrolls III: MorrowindWindows, Xbox
2003Bloodmoon
2006Knights of the NineThe Elder Scrolls IV: OblivionPlayStation 3, Windows, Xbox 360
2007Shivering Isles
2009Operation: AnchorageFallout 3
The Pitt
Broken Steel
Point Lookout
Mothership Zeta
2012DawnguardThe Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Hearthfire
Dragonborn
2016AutomatronFallout 4PlayStation 4, Windows, Xbox One
Wasteland Workshop
Far Harbor
Contraptions Workshop
Vault-Tec Workshop
Nuka-World
2020The Pitt[20]Fallout 76
Steel Reign[21]
Steel Dawn[22]
Wastelanders[23]
TBAShattered SpaceStarfieldWindows, Xbox Series X/S

Awards

References

External links