Never in the past two decades has the industry been in such disruptive  state, according to Disney Interactive vice president of product  development Bill Roper. 
"It's such a disruptive time in the industry right now. You've got  mobile just exploding; the Wii U came out last year; you've got Xbox One  and PS4 coming out this year," Roper told GameSpot during a recent  press event in San Francisco. "In the 19 years I've been doing this,  it's easily the most disruptive time, which is saying quite a bit  because we've gone through a lot in the past
." Roper further explained that Disney's gaming division has implemented a  strategy of "intelligent diversification" to combat this level of  advanced disruption. This equates to making "smart bets" on projects  that Disney believes will be successful by partnering with the right  external studios and internal companies as development sees fit.  
Even with Disney Infinity and Fantasia: Music Evolved, Disney  Interactive is not as embedded in core gaming as it used to be. In  recent years, the company closed Propaganda Games and Black Rock Studios, and canceled role-playing game Pirates of the Caribbean: Armada of the Damned.   
Asked if Disney Infinity will be a core component of Disney  Interactive's business going forward, Roper said the game doesn't have  to be, because the company has other endeavors, like an upcoming Planes tie-in, Fantasia: Music Evolved, and its mobile and social game businesses.  
"I don't know if it's the core of the Interactive business," Roper said.  "I think  the great thing is that we're so diversified with our  strategy. It's where a lot of our focus is, obviously not all of our  focus. But we do see it as a platform. We designed it to be a platform  for all things Disney: past, present, and future. And we want it to be  something that continually grows and expands to be even better and more  fun." 
 Roper previously held executive-level positions at Blizzard Entertainment, Cryptic Studios, and Flagship Studios.  
Disney Infinity launches next month, while Fantasia: Music Evolved arrives on Xbox 360 and Xbox One sometime in 2014. 
