![]() ![]() And the success of "Borderlands," published by Take-Two subsidiary 2K Games, earned Pitchford the trust of the parent company. After leaving "Duke Nukem" developer 3D Realms, he remained friends with its co-owners, Scott Miller and George Broussard. Pitchford was in a unique position to bring Duke back to life. "I moved out to Texas 15 years ago to work on 'Duke Nukem 3D,"' Pitchford says. pulled the plug on the long-in-development "Duke Nukem Forever" last year, most observers in the video-game industry thought they'd seen the last of its titular hero.īut you can't keep a bad man down - and last weekend, the cigar-chomping, beer-swilling tough guy staggered back to life at the Seattle fan-fest Penny Arcade Expo.ĭuke's unlikely savior is Randy Pitchford, founder of "Borderlands" and "Brother in Arms" developer Gearbox Software. ![]()
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