The company, now rebranded as Good Shepherd Entertainment, will focus on improving production values in indie games, especially writing, music and voice acting, while strengthening its marketing team and aggressively growing its proprietary private investor network to participate in its successful revenue-sharing model.
The newly expanded team includes executives from Devolver Digital, Sony, South by Southwest and Wargaming.net. Devolver co-founder Mike Wilson will dedicate the lion’s share of his time to Good Shepherd as its chief creative officer. Brian Grigsby, who helped start Devolver and has served the Company for the past three years as a management consultant, is now Good Shepherd’s CEO, while Gambitious founder Paul Hanraets will serve as president.
“We love to start new things, iterating and evolving upon what we've created before,” said Mike Wilson. “I believe we’ve proven we do business in a way that works for indies and investors while remaining fair and transparent for everyone. Good Shepherd is a fresh vision continuing that same spirit.”
“We are extremely pleased to expand the global media and entertainment experience of our investment team and governing board,” said Brian Grigsby. “The fresh operating capital will now allow us to prepare for scale and the expansion of our unique investment opportunity providing interested investors the means to participate in the billion-dollar global video game industry."
"Our most important job is to lend our ears, guide the project as needed, and help our partners achieve their vision," said Ben Andac, who joins Good Shepherd as a business and product developer after years in product development at Sony Interactive Entertainment Europe. "As a publisher, we're here to add value to each game and alleviate the burden of production while maintaining the utmost respect for developers' creative freedom."
The upcoming games previously announced under the Gambitious publishing label – Milanoir, MachiaVillain, and Outreach – will now be released under the Good Shepherd name. Each of these titles will continue to receive the company’s full support, with all relevant assets rebranded appropriately.
Good Shepherd‘s first original signings include Dim Bulb Games and Serenity Forge’s brilliant Where the Water Tastes Like Wine, which received seven “best of E3” nominations, and Phantom Doctrine, the company’s most ambitious project yet, which will be formally announced and shown at Good Shepherd's first official presences at gamescom and PAX West.