Richard ‘Lord British’ Garriott still wants to make Ultima Online 2: ‘All we need now is to buy EA’

He's been pitching it to EA "every 5-10 years".

He's been pitching it to EA "every 5-10 years".

As the very successful launch of New World last year showed us, there’s still a big appetite for new MMOs these days, even if the heyday of the genre feels behind us. But what about a sequel to a classic? The father of Ultima, Richard Garriott, still wants to make a follow-up to what was arguably the first MMO, Ultima Online, but so far hasn’t had much luck.

Spotted by GamesRadar on Twitter, Garriott pitched a brief vision of what a new Ultima Online could be like, with “original-ish PvP rules”, but where the developers would do a better job of “protecting the innocent” and “encouraging folks to embrace the danger of straying from the path of safety”.

Perhaps: a new UO updated, but original-ish pvp rules… and a new solo player U4/U10. All we need now is to buy EA. 😉 https://t.co/aII10ycwYTJuly 19, 2023

See more

On top of that, he’s also keen to bring back singleplayer Ultima. The only thing that’s stopping him is that he doesn’t own the licence. EA has locked up Ultima in its vault, though it’s not languishing entirely. Ultima Online is still live, currently under the stewardship of Broadsword, the same studio that will soon be taking Star Wars: The Old Republic off BioWare’s hands.

He has pitched the idea to EA before—several times in fact. “I repeat the process every 5-10 years. They start saying ‘good idea’, then end on, well, no, after some internal review, we can’t or won’t.”

It’s not a surprise. Despite still publishing a couple of MMOs, a risk-averse publisher like EA isn’t likely to take a punt on a very expensive MMO in 2023. And while I would be thrilled to see Ultima Online 2 appear, I can understand EA’s hesitancy given that Garriott’s last two MMOs were far from successes.

Tabula Rasa shut down after only two years, while Shroud of the Avatar—the Ultima Online spiritual successor—never really found its footing. The assets and rights were sold to another studio, Catnip Games, in 2019, after Garriott had already stepped down as CEO of the original developer Portalarium.

So while Garriott is an important figure in the history of RPGs and MMOs, his influence has dwindled significantly, releasing only a single game in the last decade. Ultima’s name doesn’t hold as much weight now, either, though I suspect a lot of MMO players my age would absolutely lap up a sequel, especially now that the kind of unfettered PvP that Ultima Online featured is so much rarer.

Don’t expect to see Ultima Online 2 get announced, then, but who knows? Maybe Garriott will wear EA down, or come up with a pitch that it can’t ignore. Weirder things have happened!

About Post Author