Inscape (company)

[3] Michael L. Nash executive produced Freak Show (published by Voyager in 1993) in cooperation with San Francisco-based art collective The Residents,[1] calling it "a cross between 'Sim City' and 'Twin Peaks.

[1] Bad Day on the Midway was something of a sequel to Freak Show, with both games taking place at traveling carnival.

[1][5] While four other company executives, vice presidents Rob Sebastian, David Boss, Brock LaPorte and project director Rebekah Behrendt moved with the merger, Nash went his own way.

[6] In a June 1997 interview about multimedia and his company, Nash said:What digitally interactive mixed media offers is the opportunity to make associations among any kind of expression in text, image, or sound and any other expression in any of these media, so it does provide a quantum leap, but this leap is culturally important only if it is used to make experiences that are more densely and dynamically immersive.

This is why we named the company Inscape, because we wanted to focus on multimedia's capability to transport us to compelling inner landscapes.