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THE importance of the gaming industry to the Cambridge area was underlined by Jagex Software winning Business of the Year in the Cambridge News Business Excellence Awards 2009. Jagex CEO Mark Gerhard and founder Andrew Gower, with Paul Cullen, from sponsor Price Bailey, and Kate Adie at the Cambridge News Business Excellence Awards 2009The firm, based on the Science Park and Business Park, personifies the idea of the from-nowhere-to-world-domination games company thanks to RuneScape, which entered the Guinness Book of World Records as the "most popular massively multiplayer online role-playing game" (MMORPG) last year.
Woodcutting is a skill used to chop logs from trees. These logs may be used for firemaking, fletching, or possibly construction. Simply click on a tree to chop it down. However, you will need to have the necessary hatchet in your inventory and a minimum woodcutting level.
If you are just starting out in Woodcutting you may want to pay a visit to Wilfred the Woodcutting Tutor just south of the furnace near Lumbridge Castle to learn about the different kinds of trees and hatchets. He will give you a free Bronze hatchet and Tinderbox if you lose yours.
A huge 3D adventure, it tasks players with slaying monsters, completing quests and finding treasure. Jagex was founded in 2001 by Cambridge University graduate Andrew Gower, with help from his brother Paul, and colleague Constant Tedder was installed as CEO. The firm had 5,000 subscriptions within a week of launching RuneScape on a pay-to-play platform, easily covering its costs for the whole of its first year. By 2007, the game had six million active free subscribers and one million pay-to-play subscribers, earning it the record. Jagex now employs 400 people directly in games development. This represents 5 per cent of all UK games developers and 50 per cent of those in Cambridge - easily outstripping Sony and Frontier Silicon.
The Gower brothers, who have a 52 per cent stake in Jagex, have been propelled into the Sunday Times Rich List with a fortune estimated at £112m. They are still involved in the firm on the content and technical side, leaving the day-to-day management in the hands of Mark Gerhard. A scene from RuneScapeJagex's RuneScape and FunOrb - a games portal - remain hugely popular and a new MMORPG is expected this year. Meanwhile, RuneScape remains by far the most successful example of the genre ever produced. Andrew Gower and Mark Gerhard collected the Business of the Year trophy from Paul Cullen, of Price Bailey Chartered Accountants, who sponsored the category, and BBC journalist Kate Adie, who hosted our awards evening at King's College in Cambridge. An audience of 200 attended the evening