June 23, 2011 6:47 PM

Booming video game industry in Texas

By
Mark Strassmann
(CBS News) 

DALLAS - On the plains of Dallas, the pioneers have moved into offices of the exploding video game industry. Only Silicon Valley's is bigger.

"At Gearbox, we've had a great few years, a great run," Steve Gibson tells CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann.

Gibson's vice president at Gearbox Software. With hits like "Brothers in Arms" and "Borderlands," under its belt, it's America's largest independent video game studio with 200 programmers, designers, artists and producers.

So profitable, Gibson handed out five-figure, quarterly bonuses this week.

Stay calm: Duke Nukem Forever is finally here

"You've got hundreds of guys and girls working here who have a safe job and will grow that local economy," Gibson says. "And more talent keeps coming to Texas. It's been a great time."

Think of this game's monster as the recession. Around Dallas, the video game industry has helped shoot it down, with double-barrel, double-digit growth every year since 2005 - right through America's worst economic crisis since the great depression .

Why Dallas? It's mostly a happy coincidence. In 1993 a Dallas company created "Doom" a landmark first-person shooter video game.

The industry took off: video game studios now employs 1,100 people here.

Pictures: Video games then and now

Dallas-based GameStop has become the world's largest video game retailer.

Affordable escapism is hot. In the U.S., annual video game revenue is $25 billion. That's almost double movies and music revenues combined.

Gibson says, "For a lot of people it's a protection from the worries of the outside world."

Graduate students at Southern Methodist University also want a piece of the gaming action. Peter Raad founded SMU's masters program in video game development.

"For a place like Texas, these are great, great professions to have," Raad says. "The average salary of video game developers is around $90,000 per year."

Dallas has found a fantasy that pays real money.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
Add a Comment
by skyler23 December 2, 2011 6:27 PM EST
Yeah I agree with this totally, it totally makes sense.

http://mygamefrog.com/147015/star-wars-the-old-republic/
Reply to this comment
by jansan1 June 28, 2011 2:31 AM EDT
CBS is a very good news site. so its like many people in world. its news is right news.
=======================
<a href="http://www.betterbuildingprices.com.au" title="builders" rel="dofollow">builders</a>
Reply to this comment
by jansan1 June 28, 2011 2:29 AM EDT
CBS is a very good news site. so its like many people in world. its news is right news.
=======================
<a href="http://www.betterbuildingprices.com.au" rel="dofollow">builders</a>
Reply to this comment
by kellyted27 June 27, 2011 10:46 AM EDT
Oh and NHL 12 looks AWESOME
Reply to this comment
by kellyted27 June 27, 2011 10:45 AM EDT
They http://www.facebook.com/pages/Bobby-Kotick/126671757376595#!/easports http://www.facebook.com/pages/Bobby-Kotick/126671757376595 are great for the economy. kep it coming
Reply to this comment
by longtree-2009 June 24, 2011 5:40 AM EDT
soon there will be so many game developers that salaries will drop considerably. it seems like it happens every time that certain jobs make great money, there is a sudden rise in college degrees in the field and it becomes an overcrowded profession, field.
Reply to this comment
by Delontra June 23, 2011 9:09 PM EDT
"The average salary of video game developers is around $90,000 per year." I must agree with AvigonMimi on this one.

As an aside, why is this called "Texas" when you pretty much only feature one company? How about Austin, which is full of development studios. I guess if you have never heard of BioWare, SOE, Vigil or Blizzard, you wouldn't know to feature them.

Not to mention, the heaps of other companies such as UTV True Games, Kings Isle, Trion, Twisted Pixel, Heatwave Interactive, Junction Point (Disney Interactive).
Reply to this comment
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook