Skip to main content

Blizzard veterans team up to form new game company

Former Blizzard CEO and co-founder Mike Morhaime launched a new video game company called Dreamhaven with several high-profile Blizzard veterans who have left the company over the last few years.

“I’m excited to team up with such talented people who care deeply about games and their communities,” Morhaime said in an announcement on Wednesday. “I’ve always believed in the power of games to bring people together regardless of backgrounds or boundaries. With Dreamhaven, we look forward to creating and sharing new experiences with players everywhere.”

Dreamhaven will launch with two development studios, which are both run by big names from Blizzard’s past. Moonshot Games is led by Jason Chayes, Dustin Browder, and Ben Thompson, while Secret Door’s staff includes Chris Sigaty, Alan Dabiri, and Eric Dodds. All of the names involved left Blizzard within the past two years.

Both studios are tiny at the moment, with 17 employees in total. While Dreamhaven is launching with a shoestring staff across its three entities, it is currently hiring more.

Dreamhaven serves as the publisher for the development studios underneath it. The company functions as a support system for developers as well, providing funding and guidance to its studios.

What games may come

Dreamhaven hasn’t yet announced its future plans or what games its studios are working on. Morhaime noted that both studios are in very early stages of new games right now and that neither studio is developing with platforms in mind yet.

The talent list gives some idea as to the types of games that might come from the studios. Moonshot Games’ Chayes was the production director on Hearthstone, while Thompson was the game’s creative director. Thompson’s credits also include World of Warcraft’s trading card game and Magic: The Gathering, packing the new studio with talent related to collectible card games.

“Though it’s very early days, when we think about Moonshot, we imagine a studio that celebrates curiosity and courage,” Chayes said somewhat cryptically in the announcement. “We aspire to be bold in our approach, and we think the best way to do that is to create a culture centered around trust.”

Secret Door’s staff played a major role in some of Blizzard’s iconic games. The team’s credits span titles like World of Warcraft, StarCraft, and Heroes of the Storm. There’s a wealth of multiplayer experience between the team’s leads, though no games have been announced yet.

With experience across real-time strategy games, MOBAs, and collectible card games, there’s a wide range of genres the studios could cover. The talent involved seems to indicate that Dreamhaven could become a home for the kinds of genres that helped Blizzard first rise to prominence.

Editors' Recommendations

Giovanni Colantonio
Giovanni is a writer and video producer focusing on happenings in the video game industry. He has contributed stories to…
Activision Blizzard games will stay on PlayStation after all
Soldiers infiltrating building in Modern Warfare.

In a surprising about-face, Microsoft announced that all Activision Blizzard games, including future Call of Duty releases, will continue to launch on PlayStation consoles even after any existing deals expire. Microsoft was reportedly already set to release Call of Duty games on other consoles through 2023.

Detailed in a blog post focused on Microsoft's approach to numerous app stores, the company committed to releasing games from its newly acquired publisher, Activision Blizzard, on platforms besides Xbox going forward. "To be clear, Microsoft will continue to make Call of Duty and other popular Activision Blizzard titles available on PlayStation through the term of any existing agreement with Activision," reads the post. "And we have committed to Sony that we will also make them available on PlayStation beyond the existing agreement and into the future so that Sony fans can continue to enjoy the games they love."

Read more
Blizzard is making a survival game in an all-new universe
A hunter crouches before footprints in Blizzard concept art.

Blizzard has shared the first details about an upcoming title -- and it's a brand-new IP. In a news post and accompanying tweet, Blizzard says that the title is "a survival game in an all-new universe."

The storied, but troubled developer called for job applicants to help "write the next chapter in Blizzard's story." The game will come to both PC and console, but few other details are available at this time. The blog post was primarily used to advertise open positions on the project, which include roles in art, design, and engineering.

Read more
7 Activision Blizzard games we want to see on Game Pass
Characters fly on mounts in World of Warcraft Classic.

Last week's acquisition of Activision Blizzard by Microsoft shocked both the gaming and business worlds. In a post published to Xbox Wire, CEO of Microsoft Gaming Phil Spencer shared that after the deal goes through, Microsoft plans to offer many of Activision Blizzard's titles on its Game Pass service. While no specific titles were mentioned, Spencer wrote that Microsoft will put "both new titles and games from Activision Blizzard's incredible catalog" on both PC and Xbox Game Pass.

As expected, fans everywhere have gone wild imagining which old franchises from Activision and Blizzard history Microsoft will resurrect. While the obvious choices are titles from recent history, like Overwatch, there are a lot of hidden gems in both companies' vaults that could find new audiences through Microsoft. Here are the titles and franchises we think deserve a spot on the Game Pass roster.
World of Warcraft
Blizzard's seminal MMO, which originally launched in 2004, is well due for a refresh. While the game is still churning out content and expansions -- the most recent one, Shadowlands, came out in 2020 -- the venerable game seems to be losing its footing to other popular games in the MMO space, like Final Fantasy XIV.

Read more