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The subject of this article appeared in Call of Duty. The subject of this article appeared in Call of Duty 2. The subject of this article appeared in Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare. The subject of this article appeared in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. The subject of this article appeared in Call of Duty: Classic. The subject of this article appeared in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3. The subject of this article exists in or is relevant to the real world. This article was previously featured


Infinity Ward Logo

Infinity Ward is a video game developer founded by former employees of 2015 incorporated in Encino, California that developed many of the games in the Call of Duty series. Activision has owned Infinity Ward since 2003. Infinity Ward originally consisted of members of 2015 Inc., which developed Medal of Honor: Allied Assault, and wanted to split off and earn more money. Infinity Ward is the founder of Call of Duty.

History

Infinity Ward's first game, Call of Duty, won over 80 Game of the Year awards and 47 Editor's Choice Awards. The sequel, Call of Duty 2 for the Xbox 360 and PC, sold more than one million copies in the United States of America alone and was the first Xbox 360 game to sell 1 million copies in the United States, making it the best selling Xbox 360 game until Gears of War. Call of Duty 3 was not made by Infinity Ward and did not fare nearly as well as the previous two. Infinity Ward released Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare with huge success, selling over 11 million copies, and was hailed as one of the best games of the year receiving many 10/10 awards like its predecessor Call of Duty 2. Call of Duty: World at War, again, was not produced by Infinity Ward. The most recent Infinity Ward installment, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, was a bigger hit, despite having some controversial material.

Legal issues

Main article: West, Zampella, Electronic Arts, Inc. v. Activision Publishing, Inc.

Two former employees of Infinity Ward, Jason West and Vince Zampella are currently locked up in a lawsuit with Activision over unsettled royalties, which they did not receive for the sales of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. Activision are also suing West and Zampella along with Electronic Arts for $400 million,[1] for certain conspiracies which aimed to detriment Modern Warfare 2. West and Zampella are accused of helping EA with the development of rival game Battlefield: Bad Company 2, which would be a breach of their contracts with Activision. Recently, West and Zampella have added fraud charges against Activision in their counterlawsuit.[2]

Controversy

For more information, see Wikipedia's article on the controversies surrounding Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2.

Infinity Ward was the focus of much controversy before Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 was officially released, when a video showing the mission "No Russian" was released in which the player has the option to kill civilians as an undercover CIA agent posing as a terrorist. The level was, however, made skip-able.

Infinity Ward was also criticized for certain decisions announced further before the game was leaked, when it was revealed that they had removed support for dedicated servers for the PC version of the game, instead opting to use a matchmaking system similar to the console versions of the games, known as IWNet. This denied PC gamers from being able to mod the game easily, as well as limiting the amount of players in a match. It was also revealed that the developer console (usually activated by pressing the tilde key) had also been removed.

A user on the Infinity Ward forums discovered that when one attempted to write the words "cunt" or "bitch", it would be censored and replaced with the word "girl", drawing complaints from gamers that this was "sexist". Robert Bowling, Infinity Ward's creative strategist, described it as a "word censor fail", and corrected the mistake the very next day.[3]

Infinity Ward was also accused of being homophobic, when a viral video about grenade spamming in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 was uploaded on YouTube. The video called grenade spammers "pussies" and urged players to "Fight Against Grenade Spam", the acronym being "F.A.G.S.".

Major employees

Iw team members

Infinity Ward's employees during the post-Modern Warfare 2 period

Former employees

  • Brad Allen - Artist, Concept Artist
  • Brent McLeod - Designer
  • Bruce Ferriz - Animator
  • Carly Gillis - Executive assistant
  • Chad Grenier - Designer
  • Chad Barb - Designer
  • Charlie Wiederhold - Designer
  • Chris Lambert - Engineer
  • Christopher Cherubini - Lead Artist
  • Christopher Dionne - Designer
  • Drew McCoy - Systems Administrator
  • Earl Hammon - Lead Software Engineer
  • Francesco Gigliotti - Lead Software Engineer
  • Grant Collier - President of Infinity Ward
  • Jake Keating - Designer
  • Jason McCord - Designer
  • Jason West - CTO of Infinity Ward
  • Jiesang Song - Engineer
  • Joel Emslie - Lead Artist, Concept Artist
  • Joel Gompert - Engineer
  • John Haggerty - Engineer
  • Jon Shiring - Programmer
  • Keith "Ned" Bell - Designer
  • Kristin Cotterell - Human Resources/Recruitment
  • Mackey McCandlish - Lead Designer
  • Mark Grigsby - Lead Animator, voiced SSgt. Griggs (Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare)
  • Mike Seal - Quality Assurance Manager
  • Mohammad Alavi - Designer
  • Paul Messerly - Lead Animator
  • Preston Glenn - Designer
  • Rayme C. Vinson - Engineer
  • Robert Field - Lead Engineer
  • Robert Gaines - Lead Artist
  • Roger Abrahamsson - Designer
  • Ryan Lastimosa - Artist (Specialized in Weapons)
  • Sean Slayback - Designer
  • Steve Fukuda - Lead Designer, Writer, Additional Writer and Additional Voice Director
  • Todd Alderman - Lead Designer
  • Vince Zampella - CEO of Infinity Ward
  • Zied Rieke - Level Designer

Games made

Trivia

External links

References

Wikipedia Logo
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Infinity Ward.
The list of authors can be seen in the page history.
As with the Call of Duty Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons License.
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