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"myst" partnership is riven_______
RAND AND ROBYN MILLER, THE BROTHERS WHO CREATED THE WORLD'S MOST POPULAR COMPUTER GAMES, GO THEIR SEPARATE WAYS. BY KARLIN LILLINGTON | Rand and Robyn Miller -- the brothers who created the beloved worlds of "Myst" and "Riven" -- have decided to end their formal working partnership. The move means that the most successful computer game development partnership in the history of the medium is over. For the first time, Rand Miller confirmed in London last week that his younger brother, Robyn, has left their company, Cyan, to "design new worlds." Cyan, the Millers' game development firm in Spokane, Wash., will continue under Rand's solo leadership. Richard Vander Wende, the third part of the creative team that produced Cyan's current hit, "Riven," will also move on to new projects outside of Cyan, according to Rand Miller. The break-up -- amicable, according to all parties, unlike the fraternal division that lay at the heart of "Myst" itself -- comes as the Miller brothers dominate the game charts with both the 5-year-old "Myst" and its long-awaited sequel, "Riven." "Myst" has sold more than 4 million copies since the adventure/exploration game was first released on CD-ROM in 1993. In a feat yet to be matched in the fast and furious games market, "Myst" reached a mass audience (a third of them women) rather than a niche enclave of teen gamers. The Millers became digital celebrities and earned that early-'90s badge of hipness, an appearance in a Gap ad. In the five years since its release, "Myst" has never fallen off the lists of the 10 top-selling CD-ROM games -- and once again led in sales last week, according to PC Data. And despite its late-in-the-year October release, "Riven" was the top-selling game for 1997; it has now sold close to 1.5 million copies. So it's not just the fans who will be disappointed by the news of the Millers' split. Bröderbund, which published both of their games, has relied heavily on the Miller brothers' oeuvre to pump up sliding profits. In London to promote the release of "Riven" for the Sony PlayStation, Rand Miller emphasized that the brothers' dissolution of their partnership was a friendly affair. "There've been crazy rumors that have gone around, that Robyn and Rand have fallen out," he sighs. In fact, he says, Robyn has left to work on plans for a film: "He's the visionary, he's dying to get on to the next thing." Rand, on the other hand, will at least initially concentrate on refocusing Cyan as the headquarters for a "Myst"/"Riven" product franchise: "Somebody's got to mind the store, for lack of a better term, or do a more contained next thing." Robyn Miller confirmed the news in an e-mail: "I am, indeed, 'off making worlds.' Really, though, the worlds are just a vehicle for something I'm far more interested in: stories. Having never really taken an opportunity to test myself (and express myself) in a more linear medium, I'm anxious to finally go that route and see what happens. Rand and I agreed that this would not be best achieved within the walls of Cyan, which is, at its core, an interactive company. So, because of that, and because of some of the obvious risk associated with what I'm doing, we agreed that my work should be a bit more independent." Robyn says he is actively developing two movies. Are they related to the "Myst" and "Riven" universes? Nope. According to Robyn, "The only thing these projects may have in common with 'Myst' or 'Riven' is that at their core will be completely developed worlds, with histories, cultures, geologies, societies and on and on." Rand's amiability toward his brother comes across clearly, but it's nonetheless plainly tempered by the experience of working for many years with a strong creative personality. "I don't want to give the impression that there's this huge split -- there's still some tie to Cyan. I work with him, he works with me and we chat on a regular basis," says Rand. "But we wanted to make it separate enough where we each kind of have our own vision ... If there's too many people in charge either the stew gets ugly or the people get ugly. So we just as soon'd keep it on good terms." "Riven," which took four years to complete, was overseen by three minds -- Rand, Richard and Robyn -- which seems to have stretched the relationship thin at times. Now, Rand repeatedly mentions the need to have a solo vision on projects, especially if they decide to work again on future ventures: "It was a wonderful working relationship and I wouldn't hesitate to get involved in it again. I think if we did again it would be with one driver on a project." - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - N E X T_P A G E .|.
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