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Codemasters Nabs F1 License

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    Codemasters Nabs F1 License



    Formula One is to have its first official computer game in more than two years next season following the capture of a new official licencing deal with British gaming company Codemasters, autosport.com can reveal.

    With Sony having published the most recent official F1 game last summer, based on the 2006 season and available only on PlayStation consoles, Codemasters' deal will see F1 return to a multiformat platform for the first time in many years.


    The game is set to be available on all major home consoles, as well as handheld and PC gaming formats.


    After weeks of discussion between Codemasters and Formula One Administration, it is anticipated that the company will produce the first game next year, based on the 2009 F1 season. This will be the first game that Lewis Hamilton will appear in.


    Rod Cousens, chief executive officers of Codemasters, said: "Formula One is ambitious in expanding its reach with more circuits planned beyond recent additions in the Middle East and China. It is also ambitious in expanding its reach via technology.


    "The digital communities that computer and video gaming creates will play a key role in further growing the F1 audience and connecting them globally.


    "As a world-leading creator of driving games, this alliance with F1 is the jewel in Codemasters' racing crown and creates an undisputed segment champion."


    Chris Deering, chairman of Codemasters, added: "Codemasters' success and recent innovations in the racing game space makes the company more than appropriately tuned for the challenge.


    "The combination of F1's new momentum of expansion and Codemasters' contemporary technology and past experience is the breaking of a new dawn for the sport, on the track and on the HD game screen."


    Codemasters Studios has already begun preparations for the major task of creating the new game, by strengthening their team with personnel from the now defunct Sega Racing Studio.


    There are 350 people working on the project, which will be based on the EGO Engine that Codemasters has put to good use on the Colin McRae: DIRT and soon-to-be-released Race Driver: GRID titles.

    #2
    Holy Sh8t !, Ace news , though I wish Geoff Crammond was making it , other than that this is the next best thing. Stuido Liverpool were sh8t

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      #3
      Chris Deering would have negotiated many of the previous Sony/FOA deals with Bernie in the past so this isn't all that suprising, although i did expect EA to have nabbed it.

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        #4
        Good, so we'll finally get a F1 game on the 360, really thought EA would wade in with loads of dollars and nab the licence. The success of Hamilton will no doubt have helped Codemasters part with a big pile of cash.
        Last edited by VR46; 09-05-2008, 08:56.

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          #5
          Removed frame rate speculation. Save it till the game exists and then by all means let us know if it's 30fps.
          Last edited by charlesr; 09-05-2008, 13:12.

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            #6
            Please tell me that they still have the Micromachines license. I've been dreaming about Micromachines F1 for years. Years I tell you!

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              #7
              You think the game will be called

              TARMAC

              or something like that?

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                #8
                after playing DIRT and GRID, I won't get any high hopes for a decent F1 game from them....

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                  #9
                  Would be interesting to know what they paid. I think I read somewhere they offered the new license to Sony for £200m for 5 or 7 years, or something, which is just mad money!

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                    #10
                    This is amazing news, the 360 deserves an F1 game on it. Let's just hope they do their first try at an F1 game well.

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                      #11
                      Agree with TheForce, DIRT was ok but I've always thought of Codies as a B list racing maker. They need to get back to the more sim like style of the early McRaes and TOCAs to make something of this.

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by charlesr View Post
                        Removed frame rate speculation. Save it till the game exists and then by all means let us know if it's 30fps.
                        All fear the number "30" .. and the letters "F" "P" & "S"

                        It's using the same engine as DIRT & GRID - so I think most people would be safe in assuming that this F1 game will run at the same rate.

                        You obviously believe in miracles. I hope it happens.

                        Originally posted by vanpeebles View Post
                        Agree with TheForce, DIRT was ok but I've always thought of Codies as a B list racing maker. They need to get back to the more sim like style of the early McRaes and TOCAs to make something of this.
                        Yep... the company has changed quite a bit.
                        Last edited by Leon Retro; 12-05-2008, 19:00.

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                          #13
                          Originally posted by EvilBoris View Post
                          You think the game will be called

                          TARMAC
                          TaRMAC

                          I'm all for this, I really enjoyed DiRT, probably wasn't the most accurate depiction of rallying there's ever been but it was fun and Codemasters do have a history of producing super-real racing games.

                          Whichever way this goes it'll be worth a purchase, for me. Grand Prix' over Xbox Live would be excellent

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                            #14
                            they should dust off Geoff Crammond, give the good man some money, and let him create this F1 game for them,

                            now that would make me happy !

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                              #15
                              Codemasters Studios has already begun preparations for the major task of creating the new game, by strengthening their team with personnel from the now defunct Sega Racing Studio.
                              Surprised no one has commented on this yet. Glad to see at least some of them have found new jobs, Sega Rally apparently had lots of potential especially as the studios first effort.

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