Eidos to distribute MumboJumbo casual games in Europe

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Eidos Interactive has recently announced that it has made a distribution deal with casual game developer and publisher MumboJumbo to release six PC game franchises to European retail on February 9 2007. The MumboJumbo casual game titles to be released include: Jewel Quest, Luxor: Amin Rising, Super Collapse! 3, Cubis 2, Chainz 2: Relinked, and 7 Wonders of the Ancient world.

Larry Sparks, Global Head of Brands Management for Eidos had this to say about the deal:

These titles are a perfect entry into the premium casual games market for Eidos. MumboJumbo has a reputation as the premier publisher of premium casual games with numerous bestselling releases. We look forward to sharing the success in providing the perfect purchase for the rapidly growing casual games market.

Yeah, yeah, we know, the casual gamer is probably our mother, or so says all those PopCap games surveys. Anyway, on the brighter side of the European gaming scene, if violent video games do get banned or become illegal, at least they’d have Super Collapse! 3 to occupy themselves with.

Super Collapse

Eidos Interactive has recently announced that it has made a distribution deal with casual game developer and publisher MumboJumbo to release six PC game franchises to European retail on February 9 2007. The MumboJumbo casual game titles to be released include: Jewel Quest, Luxor: Amin Rising, Super Collapse! 3, Cubis 2, Chainz 2: Relinked, and 7 Wonders of the Ancient world.

Larry Sparks, Global Head of Brands Management for Eidos had this to say about the deal:

These titles are a perfect entry into the premium casual games market for Eidos. MumboJumbo has a reputation as the premier publisher of premium casual games with numerous bestselling releases. We look forward to sharing the success in providing the perfect purchase for the rapidly growing casual games market.

Yeah, yeah, we know, the casual gamer is probably our mother, or so says all those PopCap games surveys. Anyway, on the brighter side of the European gaming scene, if violent video games do get banned or become illegal, at least they’d have Super Collapse! 3 to occupy themselves with.

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