Synergistic Software
American video game developer (1978–1999)
title: "Synergistic Software" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["defunct-companies-based-in-washington-(state)", "sierra-entertainment", "defunct-video-game-companies-of-the-united-states", "video-game-development-companies", "companies-based-in-bellevue,-washington", "video-game-companies-established-in-1978", "video-game-companies-disestablished-in-1999", "1978-establishments-in-washington-(state)", "1999-disestablishments-in-washington-(state)"] description: "American video game developer (1978–1999)" topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synergistic_Software" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary American video game developer (1978–1999) ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox company"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Synergistic Software |
| logo | Synergistic_Software_Logo.png |
| founded | |
| defunct | |
| founder | Robert Clardy |
| Ann Dickens Clardy | |
| location_city | Seattle |
| location_country | United States |
| fate | Closed |
| industry | Video games |
| parent | Sierra On-Line (1996–1999) |
| :: |
| name = Synergistic Software | logo = Synergistic_Software_Logo.png | type = | founded = | defunct = | founder = Robert Clardy Ann Dickens Clardy | location_city = Seattle | location_country = United States | fate = Closed | key_people = | industry = Video games | num_employees = | parent = Sierra On-Line (1996–1999) Synergistic Software was a video game developer based in Seattle. Founded in 1978, the company published some of the earliest available games and applications for the Apple II family of computers. They continued developing games for various platforms into the late 1990s.
History
After graduating from Rice University in 1974 with degrees in Electrical Engineering and Mathematical Science, Robert (Bob) Clardy was hired by Boeing as an electrical engineer at the Johnson Space Center, then moved to Seattle in 1977 with his wife Ann. Bob Clardy first was exposed to personal home computers at that time, following the releases of the Apple II and Tandy TRS-80, both in 1977. He purchased an upgraded (16 Kb) Apple II in 1978 and began modifying the code for Dragon Maze, an Integer BASIC program written by Gary J. Shannon Shannon's Dragon Maze randomly generated a maze which the player would then have to navigate and escape while being chased by a dragon.
Synergistic was founded in 1978 by Bob and Ann Dickens Clardy; according to them, Ann's father named the company.
In Dungeon Campaign, the player explores four randomly generated maze levels with a party of fifteen adventurers, gathering as much gold as possible while avoiding traps and the guardian of each level. Gregg Williams reviewed it in 1980 for Byte, calling it one of his favorite games for Apple II. Wilderness Campaign, which added resource management to an adventure set in the "Kingdom of Draconia", is credited with inspiring the gameplay of the 1981 electronic board game Dark Tower.
Synergistic also published several business applications, including a word processor, graphics utility (Higher Graphics, 1979), and a simple database program called The Modifiable Database. Modifiable Database grew from an outside commission which Clardy had taken to write a simple database program. Synergistic hired its first full-time employee in March 1981, a programmer named Mike Branham, followed by Bob's younger brother Will, later that year, to handle marketing. Also in 1981, Synergistic moved from Bob and Ann's basement into an office space, followed by a move in 1982 to a larger office in Renton, Washington.
Synergistic was acquired by Sierra On-Line in 1996. They maintained their identity as an independent development group within Sierra until the studio was closed on February 22, 1999.
Software
Campaign-Adventure series
- Dungeon Campaign (1978)
- Wilderness Campaign (1979)
- Odyssey: The Compleat Apventure (1980)
- Apventure to Atlantis (1982) World Builders engine series
- War in Middle Earth (1988)
- Spirit of Excalibur (1990)
- Vengeance of Excalibur (1991)
- Conan: The Cimmerian (1991)
- Warriors of Legend (1993) Non-games
- Higher Text II (1980)
- Data Reporter (1981) Other games
- Escape from Arcturus (1981)
- Bolo (1982)
- Crisis Mountain (1982)
- Probe One: The Transmitter (1982)
- Microbe (1983)
- The Fool's Errand (1986), MS-DOS port
- Pitstop II (1984), Atari 8-bit port
- Thexder (1985), MS-DOS port
- Rockford (1988)
- SideWinder (1988)
- Silpheed (1988), MS-DOS & Apple IIGS ports
- The Third Courier (1989)
- Low Blow (1990)
- LA Law: The Computer Game (1992)
- The Beverly Hillbillies (1993)
- Homey D. Clown (1993)
- Super Battleship (1993)
- Spectre (1994)
- Carrier Aces (1995)
- Air Cavalry (1995)
- Thexder 95 (1995)
- Front Page Sports: Football Pro '97 (1996)
- Front Page Sports: Football Pro '98 (1997)
- Triple Play 97 (1996)
- Birthright - The Gorgon's Alliance (1997)
- Diablo: Hellfire (1997)
References
References
- Krogtoft, Ernst. (January 1, 2020). "Vintage Bits: Robert Clardy, Synergistic Software, and the birth of the personal home computer role playing game". Black Gate.
- (January 1978). "Apple II Reference Manual". APPLE Computer Inc..
- Pepe, Felipe. (April 2019). "The CRPG Book: A Guide to Computer Role-Playing Games". Bitmap Books.
- Hunter, David. (May 1982). "An Odyssey to Apventure".
- Williams, Gregg. (December 1980). "Dungeon Campaign".
- Jolin, Dan. (August 31, 2020). "'It was a mess': The disappearance and return of legendary '80s board game Dark Tower". Dicebreaker.
- {{cite court. link. D.R.I.]]. (1985)
- "The Modifiable Database".
- (23 February 1999). "Sierra Shuts Down Studios".
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