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Jeff Braun is an American video game producer and co-founder of the video game developer Maxis. ==Career== Braun had successfully published font packs for the Amiga personal computer when he met Will Wright at a pizza party hosted by Chris Doner in 1987. Wright had been unsuccessful in finding a game publisher for his city-building game ''SimCity''. Braun already had a wire frame jet fighter simulation game he hoped to publish, and when he saw ''SimCity'' he told Wright that the two games would give them critical mass to start a new games publisher of their own. They named the company Maxis.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=SIMply Divine )〕 Wright had been an employee of Brøderbund when he first developed the concept, so Braun and he had to return there to clear the rights to ''SimCity''. Brøderbund had just set up a new distribution office to counter the Electronic Arts (EA) ''Affiliated Label'' program. Brøderbund executives Gary Carlston and Don Daglow saw ''SimCity'', recognized its potential and urged Braun to sign a distribution deal with Brøderbund for the game. Braun wanted the jet fighter game included in the deal, and Brøderbund agreed. The first five years of Maxis' history saw them remaining with Brøderbund, before Braun added a dedicated sales force to Maxis in preparation to taking the company public. The company's IPO took place in 1995. In 1997, after setbacks on a series of secondary titles, Braun and Wright sold Maxis to Electronic Arts for US$120 million in stock. The deal made Braun the largest shareholder in EA at the time. Since 1997 Braun has continued to make investments in a wide range of software and technology companies in the United States and in Israel. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jeff Braun」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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