Minecraft:Mojang Studios
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Mojang AB,Template:Fn trading as Mojang Studios, and also known as just Mojang, is a Swedish first-party game developer for Minecraft:Xbox Game Studios, a division of Minecraft:Microsoft Gaming. It is primarily known for the creation and development of Minecraft:Minecraft. As of 2021, Mojang Studios has around 600 employees in multiple locations around the world.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref>
History
Minecraft:Markus Persson and Rolf Jansson started development on the massively multiplayer online role-playing game Minecraft:Wurm Online in 2003,<ref>Template:Link</ref> using the name Mojang Specifications.<ref>Template:Link</ref> Persson and Jansson incorporated their business under the name Mojang Specifications AB in 2007. Persson soon left and wished to reuse the name "Mojang"; Jansson renamed his company to Onetoofree AB, and later to Template:W.
During early development on Minecraft, Persson reused the name Mojang Specifications. After declining a job offer at Template:W, Persson incorporated Mojang Specifications as Mojang AB ("Mojäng Aktiebolag", Swedish for "Gadget Ltd.") with Minecraft:Jakob Porsér.<ref>Template:Link</ref> Persson then hired Minecraft:Carl Manneh as CEO, since both wanted to focus on MinecraftTemplate:Hairsp's development.
Mojang publicly announced on September 15, 2014 that they would be bought by Template:W for US$2.5 billion,<ref>Template:Link</ref><ref>Template:Link</ref><ref>Template:Link</ref><ref>Template:Ytl</ref> and they subsequently became a subsidiary of Microsoft Studios (now known as Xbox Game Studios) on November 6, 2014.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref> Mojang AB as a legal entity continues to exist as a wholly-owned subsidiary.
On May 17, 2020, on MinecraftTemplate:Hairsp's 11th anniversary, Mojang announced that they were changing their name to Mojang Studios, unveiling a new logo and a logo animation.<ref name="Mojang Studios">Template:Mcnet</ref>
Locations
Mojang Studios in Stockholm is the home office of the larger Minecraft studio and is where the decisions regarding the Minecraft franchise are made. Mojang Studios also includes satellite offices in Template:W, Template:W, Template:W, and Template:W, sharing a single studio budget and studio vision between all locations. The head of Mojang Studios is Minecraft:Kayleen Walters, who is assisted by Mojang Chief Operating Officer Annie Chenn.
The Redmond office, like the one in Stockholm, assists with all the editions. Nearly all teams are spread out across both Stockholm and Redmond offices, except that Template:El is developed primarily in Redmond, and Template:El is developed primarily in Stockholm.<ref>"On the topic of how Mojang and Microsoft Studios and so forth are presented"</ref> The London office works closely with platform partners in Europe as well as partner studio Minecraft:4J Studios. The Shangai office works closely with the partner studio Template:W. The Tokyo office works closely with platform partners in Japan and Asia.
Games
Minecraft games
- Template:MC (Template:JE and Template:BE)
- Template:MCSM
- Template:El
- Template:Edu
- Template:MCE
- Template:MCD
- Minecraft Dungeons II (upcoming)
- Minecraft Dungeons Arcade
- Template:MCL
- Template:MCB (upcoming)
Other games
Caller's Bane
Caller's Bane (originally known as Scrolls) is a Mojang-developed game first conceived and developed by Minecraft:Jakob Porsér,<ref>Caller's Bane</ref> with Minecraft:Måns Olson and Minecraft:Henrik Pettersson joining later on.<ref>Template:Tumblr</ref> Announced on March 2, 2011,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> it aims to combine elements from trading card games and traditional board games in the strategy genre.
In August 2011, Mojang had been threatened with legal action by the legal team representing Template:W with the accusation being that the original title "Scrolls" infringes on the Template:W trademark, a series of role-playing video games published by Template:W (a ZeniMax Media subsidiary). In mid-October 2011, the court case was won by Mojang,<ref>Template:Tweet</ref> and one employee described the outcome as "the court saw it from our side". No further action was taken against Mojang, and the name "Scrolls" was allowed to remain.
The game was first made available to a limited number of people through alpha key giveaways, starting from July 5, 2012.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> It then hit beta on June 3, 2013,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> since then it was purchasable at a discounted price. The game was fully released on December 11, 2014, on Windows, macOS, and Android,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> but on June 29th, 2015, Mojang announced that development of Scrolls would cease as "the game has reached a point where it can no longer sustain continuous development".<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Servers for the game didn’t shut down, however, until 2018.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
On June 20, 2018, it was announced that the game would be released for free, along with changing the name from Scrolls to Caller's Bane.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
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Cobalt
Cobalt is an action game developed by Oxeye Game Studios and published / co-developed by Mojang. Announced on August 16, 2011,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> the gameplay consists of "running, jumping, rolling, shooting, throwing, dancing, hacking, rolling, flying, sliding, climbing, looting, deflecting, racing, piñata-ing, passing, scoring… and even more rolling!". The game also includes a map editor and an engine that can be used to make new modes and games within it.
Cobalt is written in Template:W, allowing for the game to be easily modifiable. The game was first made available through an alpha, starting from December 16, 2011, when it was then offered at a discounted price.<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> On August 20, 2013, Cobalt was announced to be released on the Xbox 360 and Xbox One, with FatShark AB assisting with the port.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Originally, the game was planned to be released for PC, Xbox 360, Xbox One, and PS3 in 2014,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> but was delayed twice to allow for more development time. The game was ultimately released for PC, Xbox 360, and Xbox One on February 2, 2016.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
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Cobalt W.A.S.D.
Cobalt W.A.S.D. (short for Cobalt W.A.S.D. Aim Shoot Destroy) is an action video game developed by Oxeye Game Studios and co-developed / published by Mojang. Announced on June 1, 2017, it is a spin-off of Cobalt, focusing on the asymmetric Bomb Plant/Disarm game mode.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
The game was first made available in a closed beta on the same day, and was originally planned to be released in August of that year. However, it was delayed to allow for more development time. The game was ultimately released for PC on November 30, 2017.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
On December 1, Mojang made a Minecraft-themed texture pack to celebrate the game's release.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref>
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Crown and Council
Crown and Council is a casual strategy game fully created by Minecraft:Henrik Pettersson.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> It was originally conceived in a 72-hour Template:W, and was released on April 22, 2016. It was inspired by the games Template:W and Template:W, although many compare it to Template:W.
The game puts the player in control of a nation warring against others on a tile-based map. Each turn, the player earns income based on how many conquered tiles they have, and can spend earned money to conquer other tiles or improve their own through the construction of structures like forts, villages, and universities, which all provide different bonuses. The player wins a map once they have vanquished all enemies, regardless of actual remaining neutral tiles.<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> There are 75 maps, with additional maps being procedurally generated.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
He originally said he planned on continuing working on the game to fix bugs and add features.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> An update released in January 2017 added a 99-map campaign and tweaks to the procedural generation and land-taking mechanics to improve balance. The most important change was in the calculations affecting the attack and defense of territories: the element of "randomness" was removed, and "attrition" was added, meaning that failed attacks improve the chance of future attacks succeeding. This update also added OSX and Linux versions.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Game jam games
Catacomb Snatch
Catacomb Snatch is a game developed by Mojang as part of the first annual Minecraft:Mojam charity event, which took place on February 17, 2012, and lasted for 60 hours.<ref>https://catacombsnatch.net/index.html</ref> During this time, Mojang Studios created a brand-new game from scratch, called Catacomb Snatch. Using the results of a poll in which both the most and least voted for categories were mixed, the game features an "RTS-shoot 'em up" genre and "steampunk-Ancient Egypt" theme. The Humble Indie Bundle website featured live-stream footage of the development, and took donations; those who donated received access to the game not only once it was completed, but when the developers released stable builds during the event.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20120222201020/https://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/40321/Mojang_Humble_Indie_Bundle_team_up_to_make_charity_game.php</ref>
The objective of the game is to collect 50 batches of treasure from a Treasure Trove located somewhere on the randomly generated map before your opponent. Players can gather money by destroying enemies such as bats, cobras, mummies, and pharaohs, and collecting the coins that they drop. These coins can then be used to buy automatic turrets, coin harvesters, bombs, and rails and railcarts from your Base Camp, to help you defend and expand your territory, earn money, destroy obstacles, and build railways.<ref>https://catacombsnatch.net/about.html</ref> The game can be played both against an AI opponent in singleplayer or against another player in multiplayer.
Catacomb Snatch features a soundtrack created by Minecraft:C418 in collaboration with artist Anosou, or Mattias Häggström Gerdt,<ref>https://c418.org/albums/catacomb-snatch/</ref> who also created the music for Cobalt. The game can be downloaded and played for free here.
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Nuclear Pizza War
A game developed by Mojang as part of the second annual Minecraft:Mojam charity event, which took place on February 20, 2013 and lasted for 60 hours.
Endless Nuclear Kittens
A game developed by Mojang as part of the second annual Minecraft:Mojam charity event, which took place on February 20, 2013 and lasted for 60 hours.
Battle Frogs
Template:Main A game developed by Mojang as part of the second annual Minecraft:Mojam charity event, which took place on February 20, 2013 and lasted for 60 hours.
Docktor
A game developed by Mojang as part of the Games Against Ebola game jam, which took place on November 26, 2014 and lasted for 96 hours.
Healthcore Evolved
Template:Main A game developed by Mojang as part of the Games Against Ebola game jam, which took place on November 26, 2014 and lasted for 96 hours.
Snake Oil Stanley
A game developed by Mojang as part of the Games Against Ebola game jam, which took place on November 26, 2014 and lasted for 96 hours.
Blackout
Template:Main A game developed by Mojang as part of the Humble Blockjam Bundle game jam, which took place on November 8, 2016 and lasted for 96 hours.
Bureaucrap
Template:Main A game developed by Mojang as part of the Humble Blockjam Bundle game jam, which took place on November 8, 2016 and lasted for 96 hours.
Manor Road
Template:Main A game developed by Mojang as part of the Humble Blockjam Bundle game jam, which took place on November 8, 2016 and lasted for 96 hours.
Unreleased games
0x10c
Following the end of his involvement with Minecraft, Notch began pre-production of an alternate reality space game set in the distant future in March 2012. 0x10c is a hexadecimal number equivalent to 1612 in decimal, which equals 281,474,976,710,656, which was the number of years that had passed in the story since 1988. On April Fools' Day 2012, Mojang launched a satirical website for Mars Effect, citing the lawsuit with Bethesda as an inspiration.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> However, the gameplay elements remained true and on April 3, 2012, Mojang revealed it as a space sandbox title.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
The game was eventually put on hold in April of 2013 because Notch had found creative blocks. However, at the time, he was still interested in expanding the development staff to push the game toward release.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Eventually, the game was indefinitely shelved on August 13, 2013, but Notch added that it could be made in the future if another Mojang employee was interested in developing it.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
On September 15, 2014, the soundtrack for the game was released by Minecraft:Daniel Rosenfeld.<ref>0x10c by C418 on Bandcamp</ref>
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Brickcraft
Template:Main From September 5, 2011<ref>Template:Tweet</ref> to July 19, 2012, Mojang was co-developing a video game titled Brickcraft (codenamed Project Rex Kwon Do) alongside Template:W. Before the title had reached a significant stage of development, Mojang cancelled the collaboration to focus on developing their own titles (Minecraft, Scrolls, and 0x10c at the time).<ref>Template:Tweet</ref> Despite the cancellation, The Lego Group briefly considered acquiring Mojang, but according to Ronny Scherer, the senior director for the LEGO Games Asia/Pacific division, they decided against it as Minecraft "was still emerging" and they had "no guarantee that it would end up becoming the cultural phenomenon that it became".<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
RubyDung
Template:Main RubyDung, short for "Rubylands Dungeon Game",<ref>Template:Tweet</ref> was a Dwarf Fortress-inspired game being developed by Notch in early 2009. The game would have focused on being easier to play and more accessible than its predecessor, and would have featured both isometric and first-person viewing modes. Upon discovering Minecraft:Infiniminer, Notch decided a first-person block-based game would be a better choice for the kind of gameplay he had in mind,<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20210513102920/https://notch.tumblr.com/post/227922045/the-origins-of-minecraft#_=_</ref> and code and art from RubyDung were reused to create Minecraft.
Zombie Town
Template:Main Zombie Town was a GTA: Chinatown Wars-inspired game being developed by Notch in early 2009. It would have been a zombie game based on one of Notch’s earlier projects, Left 4k Dead. The game was never completed, but Notch later reused its character models and textures for the player character in Minecraft.
Trivia
The motto on the coat of arms logo is “e pluribus ludum” (“out of many, games”) which is a parody of e pluribus unum.
Employees
Former Office tour
Gallery
Logos
Wordmarks
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Mojang's wordmark logo from 2011 to 2013.
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Mojang's wordmark logo from 2013 to 2020.
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Mojang Studios' current wordmark logo.
Alternative Wordmarks
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Mojang Studios' current alternative wordmark logo.
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Mojang Studios' current alternative red wordmark logo.
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Mojang Studios' current alternative white wordmark logo.
Icons
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Mojang Studios' current stacked logo. (.svg)
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Mojang Studios' current stacked logo. (.png)
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Mojang Specifications logo, from 2009 to 2011.
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Mojang's logo from 2011 to 2013.
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Mojang's logo from 2013 to 2020.
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The Mojang logo that was once used on their Minecraft:YouTube channel TeamMojang (now Minecraft).
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Mojang's Pride logo (2019)
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Mojang's Support logo from 2016 to 2020.
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Mojang's Status logo from 2017 to 2020.
Splash screen logos
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Before Mojang, Minecraft:Markus Persson called his studio "BitSeven Productions". (c. 1995)<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20110320152953/http://imgur.com/a/B5WkP</ref>
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Mojang logo that was featured in the cancelled game 0x10c.
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Mojang Specifications logo splash screen used in Minecraft (Java Edition) from Alpha v1.0.4 until Beta 1.3.
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Mojang logo splash screen used in Minecraft:Java Edition 3D Shareware v1.34 and Minecraft:20w14infinite.
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Mojang logo splash screen used in Java Edition 3D Shareware v1.34 and 20w14infinite (Animated with sound).
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Current Mojang Studios splash screen for Bedrock Edition.
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Mojang Studios' animated splash screen with sound for Minecraft Dungeons.
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Mojang Studios' animated logo.
Capes
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The Mojang Minecraft:cape from 2010 to 2013
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The Mojang cape from 2013 to 2020
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The current Mojang Studios cape.
Other
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The Mojang logo used on the support page. (2016-2020)
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The footer logo used on the old Minecraft Realms website.<ref>Archived image</ref>
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The Mojang’s old footer logo.
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Mojang's footer logo before 2013.
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The Mojang logo on Notch's business card from 2009.
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Another version.
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The 2013 logo.
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An unused space-themed design.
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Another logo.
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Coat of arms logo.
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Mojang's logo from Minecraft:Minecraft Education.
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When signing up for a job at Mojang
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Another Image when signing up for a job at Mojang
Employees
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The original Mojang office.
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The M Team, working hard to make games.
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Mojang's employees, in their Minecraft suits.
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An average day at the office.
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Another average day at the office.
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The average Minecraft developer.
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JahKob in real life.
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Jeb in real life.
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Junkboy in real life. (Face hidden)
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Working hard in Mojang.
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Mojang, doing their work.
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Mojang's trophy wall.
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Mojang's trophies.
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First shirts ever sold by Mojang, featuring the classic Mojang Specifications logo.
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Mojang prepares for their move to a larger facility.
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Mojang building directory board with a note from some griefers.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref>
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Mojang Pax display.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref>
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Oil paintings of most of the Mojang employees.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref>
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Mojang's preparations for Minecraft:Mojam.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref>
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The Mojang support team hanging out in the ball pit.<ref>Template:Tweet</ref>
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Some Mojang people.
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Mojang will judge you.
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The developer cast of Minecraft in Minecraft:Java Edition 3D Shareware v1.34.
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A compilation of several employees' old Mojang avatars.
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Mojang Office in 2022.
Notes
References
External links
Template:Navbox companies Template:Navbox official resources
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