Bungie is an American video game developer founded in May 1991 under the name Bungie Software Products Corporation by two undergraduate students at the University of Chicago, Alex Seropian and Jason Jones. Originally based in Chicago, the company concentrated primarily on Macintosh games during its first nine years of existence, producing the popular Marathon and Myth series as well as games such as Oni. In 2000, Bungie was acquired by Microsoft, and their current project Halo: Combat Evolved was turned into a first-person shooter and launch title for Microsoft's new Xbox game console. Halo went on to become the Xbox's "killer app", and the game and its two sequels have sold millions of copies.
Welcome to CWAnswers
CWAnswers is your guide to the sprawling world wide web. The directory aims to provide a useful guide made by users. You can share your knowledge as well - simply sign up and edit your first entry. For questions just contact the team at support - at - cwanswers.com.
Weblinks for Bungie
Top 10 for Bungie
Things about Bungie you find nowhere else.
Select content modules
Bungie Studio
Developer of game software and the shooter game Halo.www.bungie.net/Bungie.net : Developers of Really Cool Stuff
Bungie.net is the Internet home for Bungie Studios, the developer of Halo, Myth, ... The Bungie Blog read now! Forgebattle's MMF #3 - 86 minutes ago ...www.bungie.net/?lc=1033Bungie.net : Blam!
Bungie.net is the Internet home for Bungie Studios, the developer ... Bungie Blog. Video Archives. Bungie Podcast. Letters to the Webmaster. Non Facete Nobis ...65.59.234.97/Bungie — Blogs, Pictures, and more on WordPress
A Brief Tour of the Bellevue Galleria, Bungie's Future Home ... Tags: Videogames, Bungie.net, Download, file, fileshare, ... Bungie Puts an End to Boosting ...en.wordpress.com/tag/bungie/Bungie's Countdown - UGO.com
bungie countdown ... Blu-ray Fanatic Blog. Celebrity Spotlights. Evolution of TV. Fall TV Guide. Lost Showguide ... Tags: Bungie, Countdown, E3, Halo, Halo 3, ...gamesblog.ugo.com/index.php/gamesblog/more/bungies_countdown...Bungie is an American video game developer founded in May 1991 under the name Bungie Software Products Corporation by two undergraduate students at the University of Chicago, Alex Seropian and Jason Jones. Originally based in Chicago, the company concentrated primarily on Macintosh games during its first nine years of existence, producing the popular Marathon and Myth series as well as games such as Oni. In 2000, Bungie was acquired by Microsoft, and their current project Halo: Combat Evolved was turned into a first-person shooter and launch title for Microsoft's new Xbox game console. Halo went on to become the Xbox's "killer app", and the game and its two sequels have sold millions of copies.
On October 5, 2007, Bungie announced that it had split with Microsoft and become a privately held independent company, Bungie LLC.fact: date=October 2008 Despite splitting from Microsoft, the studio will still be producing products for Xbox 360 but is free to develop for other platforms. Bungie is an independent developer, currently based in Kirkland, Washington.
Among Bungie's side projects are Bungie.net]], the company's official website, which includes forums as well as statistics-tracking and integration with Halo 3 and Halo 2, respectively. Bungie also sells company-related merchandise and runs other projects including an official Bungie podcast and online publications about game topics. The company is well-known for its informal and dedicated workplace culture, and is currently working on multiple projects, including [[Halo 3: Recon and Halo 3 downloadable content.
Founding
Bungie officially was founded in May 1991 by Alex Seropian and Jason Jones. The origin of the name "Bungie" is the subject of conflicting answers. Many in the company treat it as a closely guarded secret, while a bonus disc provided in the Halo 3 Legendary Edition states the name is "the punchline to a dirty joke", the explanation has been used before by Bungie for other questions as explanations for other company secrets. According to the Marathon Scrapbook Seropian "agonized over what he would name his company, finally settling on 'Bungie' because 'it sounded fun.'"
The company's first game was called Gnop! (Pong spelled backwards) and was offered free of charge. The team focused on the Macintosh platform, not Windows-based personal computers, because the Mac market was more open and Jones had been raised on the platform. Following Gnop!, Bungie produced Operation Desert Storm, which went on to sell 2,500 copies, and the role-playing game Minotaur: The Labyrinths of Crete in 1992.


























