Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

EA plans to fund beautiful indie games with new EA Originals initiative

Add as a preferred source on Google

EA took the stage at this year’s E3, and the company plans to double down on beautiful and engrossing indie games. There is now a name for the new initiative, too: EA Originals.

Executive Vice President of EA Studios, Patrick Söderlund, got up on stage to give details on the new push. After referencing last year’s Unravel announcement, he laid out the three core pillars of EA Originals. First, it’s about taking unique, gorgeous, and innovative experiences and bringing them to the masses. Second, it is about supporting small developers and helping them with development, marketing, and publishing. And third, EA wants to offer a level of security by giving all profits back to the developers.

Recommended Videos

After Söderlund stepped off, Klaus Lyngeled of Zoink! Games in Gothenburg, Sweden jumped on to introduce Fe. It’s an open world game that about our relationship with nature. There are no words, but music will undertone emotions and themes. You’re a cub who awakens in an unknown world to discover extraordinary creatures that communicates with songs. As you learn songs, you can connect to the forest. Like Metroid style games, the more songs you learn, the more of the forest you can unlock. There’s also the looming menace of the Silent Ones, who with each step silence the forest.

It’s a very personal experience. There isn’t one set path for the game, and Zoink! wants every experience to be unique.

EA’s foray with EA Originals should serve the publisher well. To help fund beautiful projects by small teams without asking anything in return is unprecedented. It is uncertain what EA’s long term goals are with EA Originals, but one thing is: those polls showing EA as the most evil company in the America may change.

Imad Khan
Imad has been a gamer all his life. He started blogging about games in college and quickly started moving up to various…
Samsung is fixing a long-standing OLED monitor problem, and even rival brands are on board
Samsung's new QuantumBlack film reduces reflections and preserves deep blacks on QD-OLED monitors.
Samsung QuantumBlack featured.

QD-OLED monitors are known for delivering deep blacks by turning off individual pixels completely. In real-world use, though, that advantage doesn't always hold up. Ambient light reflecting off the screen can wash out those blacks, but Samsung now has a solution.

How is Samsung fixing reflections and washed-out blacks on QD-OLED monitors?

Read more
Sony announces price hikes for PS5, PS5 Pro, and PlayStation Portal
Your PS5 dreams just got more expensive
Sony PS5 Pro Shot with Blue Light

Sony has officially announced new price increases across its PlayStation hardware lineup, including the PlayStation 5, PlayStation 5 Pro, and the PlayStation Portal remote player. The changes mark another significant shift in pricing strategy for the company, as rising global costs continue to impact the gaming industry.

A Costly Update Across The PlayStation Ecosystem

Read more
Forza Horizon 6 PC requirements are surprisingly forgiving for a modern AAA game
Your PC might actually run Forza Horizon 6 just fine
Forza

Forza Horizon 6 is shaping up to be a new visual showcase, but its PC requirements tell a different story.

Despite the next-gen graphics, the game sticks to relatively approachable specs, especially for modern AAA games. This is a welcome surprise in a time when new titles often feel like they demand a full system upgrade.

Read more