On 11 December 2006,
New Enterprise Associates announced an investment of US$30 million into Realtime Worlds. Their first release under the name Realtime Worlds was the critically acclaimed 2007 action-adventure third-person sandbox game
Crackdown, an
Xbox 360 exclusive title. In 2007, at
Develop magazine's Industry Excellence Awards, the company was nominated in a record-breaking seven categories, and took home the awards for
Innovation and
New UK/European Studio. Company chairman Ian Hetherington was also crowned
Development Legend. At the 2007
British Academy of Film and Television Arts Video Game Awards ceremony,
Crackdown was nominated in five categories and won two, for
Action and Adventure and
Use of Audio. In 2008,
Crackdown was honored as
Best Debut by the
GDC's Game Developers Choice awards. On 14 February 2008, it was announced that Realtime Worlds had secured $50M in funding from a consortium led by
venture capitalists Maverick Capital and
New Enterprise Associates and joined by the
WPP Group, a
London-based
advertising firm. The funds are expected to be used for "continued expansion". On 1 May 2010, Realtime Worlds annual accounts revealed a further $21M investment was made in the company in January 2010. This brings the total investment in Realtime Worlds since 2006 to $101M. On 29 June 2010, after five years of development, with lengthy delays,
APB was released to the general public. As of 15 July 2010,
APB had a metacritic score of 58 out of 100. On 7 July 2010, Realtime Worlds announced that it was to restructure its work force to focus more on providing "total support" for
APB. On 16 September 2010, Realtime Worlds announced that it would be shutting down
APB's servers for good. ==Administration and closure==