"I had no idea it would become a cult success," Matt Selman tells PEOPLE of the 2003 video game, which he helped write ...
We've been in a long drought of The Simpsons games, but I doubt the return of original Hit and Run developer Radical will ...
As the show hits 800 episodes, Matt Selman opens up about fan pressure, GTA-style gameplay battles, and what it would take to revive the cult classic video game.
The developer behind The Simpsons: Hit & Run and other cult classics announces its triumphant return after more than a decade.
There's a huge amount of nostalgia for The Simpsons: Hit & Run, which most would agree is the best video game based on the ...
This, as spotted by VGC, was revealed not so much with a bang, but more of a snazzy, seemingly new website that is adorned with imagery of the old Radical's games like the aforementioned beloved ...
The studio responsible for The Simpsons: Hit & Run and Prototype, Radical Entertainment, appears to be back under a new name: ...
Former Radical Entertainment leadership is leading this fresh era of the studio under its new moniker.
According to a timeline, this venture is the result of Radical Entertainment teaming up with Hothead Games, a studio that ...
Radical Entertainment, the developer that once brought us hits like The Simpsons: Hit & Run, Prototype, Scarface, Crash: Mind ...
Radical co-founder Ian Wilkinson—who departed for Hothead in 2008—serves as CEO, while former Hothead COO Tim Wilkinson again takes up that title for New Radical. Hothead, perhaps ominously, went ...
The studio behind The Simpsons Hit & Run has relaunched with a new website and a rebrand as New Radical Entertainment.