Quantic looks beyond PlayStation.
It’s been almost a year of slogging through China’s Online Game Ethics Committee and the government’s censorship. The freeze abated slightly two weeks ago, but NetEase and Tencent were conspicuously absent, until now.
Amsterdam is Sony’s new headquarters, with no Brexit deal in sight and the March 29 deadline looming, and Sony isn’t the only company leaving town.
As reported by Korea Economic Daily newspaper, the online giant could be snatched up by Tencent, Electronic Arts or others.
A new report sees former CEO Bo Andersson Klint cleared in ongoing investigation.
It’s BIG Festival’s seventh year celebrating indie games in Latin America.
The uphill battle of India’s mobile gaming market apparently isn’t enough to scare away the Japanese entertainment giant, even despite a rocky few years for the company.
Both Tencent and NetEase are missing from the first 80 games approved for the market, sparking to a slow thaw for the growing Chinese gaming market.
The Danish entertainment company, which invests in Nordic game studios, now has a 40% ownership stake in Star Stable Entertainment.
On top of making sure new games meet China’s ambiguous ethical standards, the newly formed committee is also reviewing titles that already launched.