PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Ed Fries
rdfs:comment
  • Fries left Microsoft in January 2004. He now consults with Sony Online Entertainment and is involved in a start-up called AGEIA, which aims to bring the first "physics accelerator" chip for games to market. Among his credits as executive producer are Kakutô chôjin and Blinx: The Time Sweeper. He has also received special thanks for his support in the production of other video games. He received special thanks for the making of Halo: Combat Evolved.
  • Ed Fries was vice president of game publishing at Microsoft during much of the Xbox's lifecycle. He was a prime evangelist of the platform to game developers and had an important role in the acquisition of developers Bungie Studios, Ensemble Studios and Rare. Fries left Microsoft in January 2004. He consulted with a startup company, FireAnt, that was later sold to Sony Online Entertainment. He was also involved with several startups including AGEIA, which aims to bring the first "physics accelerator" chip for games to market, and Emotiv Systems, a company building an EEG based game controller.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:halo/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:microsoft/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Ed Fries was vice president of game publishing at Microsoft during much of the Xbox's lifecycle. He was a prime evangelist of the platform to game developers and had an important role in the acquisition of developers Bungie Studios, Ensemble Studios and Rare. Fries left Microsoft in January 2004. He consulted with a startup company, FireAnt, that was later sold to Sony Online Entertainment. He was also involved with several startups including AGEIA, which aims to bring the first "physics accelerator" chip for games to market, and Emotiv Systems, a company building an EEG based game controller. Fries is currently working on bringing his favorite game, World of Warcraft, to three-dimensional life with his startup company, Figure Prints. The company makes 3D models of a player's characters using a fleet of Z Corporation printers. Within the first 12 hours of his company going live, over 4,000 people had requested an order for a model. Fries explains in an interview that each model can take about 1 week to complete. In July 2010, Fries released an Atari 2600 version of the game Halo, called Halo 2600.
  • Fries left Microsoft in January 2004. He now consults with Sony Online Entertainment and is involved in a start-up called AGEIA, which aims to bring the first "physics accelerator" chip for games to market. Among his credits as executive producer are Kakutô chôjin and Blinx: The Time Sweeper. He has also received special thanks for his support in the production of other video games. He received special thanks for the making of Halo: Combat Evolved.