Apple CEO Steve Jobs was "furious" when Microsoft announced the acquisition of Halo studio Bungie back in 2000 - and allegedly had to be calmed down with the promise that the studio's Xbox games would be ported to Mac.
Former Xbox boss, Ed Fries has revealed how he had to personally broker a deal with the fuming Apple boss, following Microsoft's move to turn the then premier Mac game developer into an Xbox-only studio.
"As soon as we announced we bought Bungie, Steve Jobs called," Fries told Develop. "He was mad at [Microsoft CEO Steve] Ballmer and phoned him up and was angry because we'd just bought the premier Mac game developer and made them an Xbox developer."
In order to cool the situation, the Xbox co-creator revealed, the platform holder took the brash move to help Bungie's former president setup an entire company with the sole purpose of porting Windows hits to Mac.
"So, during the day, I got an email from Steve Ballmer asking me to phone Steve Jobs and calm him down about the whole thing," he said.
"Anyway, we did this deal with Apple where we'd port some PC games to the Macintosh and help Peter Tamte create this company to do it, and I had to go to a Mac developer conference and get on stage and talk about this whole new partnership. It was a pretty strange time."
That company was Destineer, which ported Windows hits such as Age of Empires II and III, Tropico 2 and Unreal Tournament 2004 over to the Apple platform, as well as Halo 1 itself, which saw a relatively speedy transition to Mac OS X.
Throughout the 90s Bungie released Mac hits such as the Marathon Trilogu and action game Oni.
The morale of this story? Don't mess with Steve Jobs. Even Microsoft doesn't seem that ballsy.
http://www.computerandvideogames.com/ar ... ?id=271868WTF?
