According to Media Moleculeâs co-founder Mark Healeyâthe creative director on Little Big Planet, its sequel, and Dreamsâearly on in LBPâs creation, Microsoft was âon the prowlâ and trying to âstealâ the game from Sony.
In a new interview with MinnMax, Healey goes into great detail about the history of Little Big Planet, his feelings on the LBP3 servers being shut down forever, and more. But perhaps the most interesting story in the interview is a tale about how, after Sony had funded six months of LBP development after being âblown awayâ by an early pitch, Xbox tried to step in and grab the game post-GDC 2007.
âThe funny thing is, we actually didnât have anything in writing to say that we were actually going to continue with [Sony] or that they even owned what we were doing, is my memory of it,â said Healey, who left Media Molecule in 2023
âAnd actually, I do remember after we showed [the Little Big Planet demo] at GDC…someone from Microsoft was on the prowl. And they were kind of trying to steal us, if you like, from going with Sony. And technically, we could have done [that.] We could have been like, âYeah fuck it, letâs go with Microsoft. They are probably going to give us a load of money.ââ
But Healey says that the folks at Media Molecule felt doing that would have been âvery wrongâ and âmorally corrupt.â
When asked how serious Microsoft was in its attempt to steal away Little Big Planet from Sony, Healey made it clear that it wasnât as if a contract was slid in front of them with hard numbers or anything like that.
â[Media Molecule and an Xbox rep] went out and got a bit drunk,â said Healey, âAnd it was literallyâjust as we were dropping the (Xbox) guy off at his hotelâhe was kind of like âOh shit, I was on a mission here! Iâve got at least say something.ââ
âAnd he was just, âOh you, by the way, guys, you know we would be happy to blah blah blah take you on if you want to jump ship to usâ or something like that. And you could tell he was almost embarrassed to say it, because it would have been a very naughty thing to do.â
Healey then clarified to MinnMax that, thinking about it, it seems wild that Sony had nothing in writing about Little Big Planet after funding it. He suggested that some of the details might have been mixed up, and that âthere must have been some legal thing in place to say [Sony] owned [LBP].â But he wasnât sure and others had told him that, at least early on, that wasnât the case.
Regardless, when asked if in an alternate timeline, Little Big Planet could have been an Xbox franchise, Healey was blunt: âNo, that would never have happened,â and added that Media Molecule liked working with Sony and had developed relationships with people at the company.
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