NetEase allegedly suing Activision Blizzard following licensing deal collapse
After NetEase and Activision Blizzard's partnership ended, forcing the latter to pull games from China, NetEase is apparently seeking compensation for refunds.
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After NetEase and Activision Blizzard's partnership ended, forcing the latter to pull games from China, NetEase is apparently seeking compensation for refunds.
NetEase livestreamed it tearing down a World of Warcraft statue outside its headquarters in Hangzhou, China.
NetEase reportedly refused Activision Blizzard's request for a six month extension, with its game services currently set to go offline in China on January 23.
The second largest gaming company in China, NetEase, recently acquired Canadian developer SkyBox Labs.
The licensing agreements for many Blizzard games have expired, meaning titles will no longer be available in China.
The Detroit: Become Human developer claims it will maintain creative independence despite NetEase taking full ownership.
Toshihiro Nagoshi doesn't want to stray too far from what made the Yakuza games successful, straddling the line between serious and silly.
Hiroyuki Kobayashi is among the latest of long-tenured developers making their way over to NetEase to work on new projects.
Strict national regulations and an extremely slow approval process has left even giants like Tencent and NetEase feeling stifled on their home turf.
The former head of design on Halo Infinite and Xbox veteran is working on an action-adventure game at his new studio.