Owlchemy Labs
Private | |
Industry | Video game industry |
Founded | 2010Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. | in
Founder | Alex Schwartz |
Headquarters | Austin, Texas, U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Alex Schwartz (CEO), Devin Reimer (CTO), Carrie Witt (Artist), Graeme Borland (Wizard) |
Products |
AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!! Dyscourse Jack Lumber Snuggle Truck |
Number of employees | 14[1] |
Website |
owlchemylabs |
Owlchemy Labs, LLC is a video game developer based in Austin, Texas. The company was founded in 2010 by Worcester Polytechnic Institute graduate Alex Schwartz.[2] Owlchemy is best known for its video game franchise titled Snuggle Truck. They are currently developing the game Job Simulator.[1]
Games developed
- Rick and Morty Simulator: Virtual Rick-ality - Windows (TBA)
- Job Simulator - Windows (2016)
- Dyscourse - Windows, Mac OS X, Linux (2015)
- Jack Lumber - Windows, Mac OS X, Linux (2013)
- Snuggle Truck – iOS (2011), Nokia N9, BlackBerry PlayBook, Windows (2012)
- Smuggle Truck – Windows, Mac OS X (2011)
- AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!!: For The Awesome (with Dejobaan Games) - Windows (2011)
- Super Ramen BROTHers - iOS (2010)
Snuggle Truck controversy
Owlchemy originally developed a game called Smuggle Truck with a premise of smuggling immigrants into the US. The game was inspired by Owlchemy developer Yilmaz Kiymaz's experience as a Turkish citizen attempting to stay in the US after graduating. Apple rejected the game for its App Store due to the controversial subject matter. Owlchemy retitled the project Snuggle Truck and changed the premise to taking fuzzy animals to the zoo. The rebranded game was accepted into the app store.[3]
References
- 1 2 Scimeca, Dennis Inside Owlchemy Labs, the indie game studio that's betting it all on virtual reality Daily Dot. March 16, 2016
- ↑ Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Interactive Media & Game Development - People
- ↑ "Smuggle Truck rejection" on Joystiq
External links
Media related to Owlchemy Labs at Wikimedia Commons