
Before a career second act at Nightdive Studios, the recently-retired Larry Kuperman’s big project was Impulse. It was to be GameStop’s answer to Steam, but it went the way of the dodo in 2014. Kuperman went into his personal history building up Impulse’s catalogue when we spoke at this year’s Game Developers Conference.Kuperman came to the games industry about halfway through his professional career, with both his story and that of Impulse beginning at Stardock, a software company that was branching out into games. Stardock’s management was thinking in terms of digital distribution early—Kuperman started in 2001—and the company was laying the groundwork for its own service.”We reserved the rights to electronically sell the game,” Kuperman recalled of his first game with Stardock, economics sim The Corporate Machine. “It was part of the contract negotiation that we could sell the game electronically. I’m sure the lawyer at Take Two [was thinking], ‘It’s electronic distribution. Who cares about that?’ That moment was kind of pivotal.”The first iteration of this online store was a website called Drengin—its archived form is a real hoot, with a throwback layout advertising the hottest games coming in 2004. “Back in those days, it was not the same game experience,” recalled Kuperman. “You got this thing to download and the serial number that came in your email.”Around 2004 to 2005, when the Canadian publisher Strategy First (Jagged Alliance, O.R.B: Off-World Research Base) collapsed while working with Stardock, the software company walked away with electronic distribution rights to…
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