I’m allowed to think so embracer group By the time you finish reading this article, you own half the gaming industry. The Swedish holding company continues with yet another outlay, acquiring his Lord of the Rings and Hobbit IPs earlier this morning by acquiring Middle-earth Enterprises and a number of video game companies, including Limited Run Games and TripWire Interactive. announced that it had
List of new companies acquired by Embracer Group
Embracer Group, which owns companies such as Gearbox Entertainment, THQ Nordic, several former Square Enix studios and Saber Interactive, has embarked on the following acquisitions:
- Bitwave Games (Retro Games)
- Giotek (accessory brand)
- Limited Run Game (Physical Game Publisher – Collector’s Edition)
- Middle-earth Enterprise (Lord of the Rings, Hobbit)
- Singtrix (music and audio game products)
- Master (Japanese Studio)
- Tuxedo Labs (Teardown)
- TripWire Interactive (Maneater, Killing Floor)
Embracer will set up a new division called Embracer Freemode, within which these companies will operate. Embracer Freemode focuses on his six market segments of retro/classic/heritage games and entertainment, game development and production, devices, gear, collectibles, community and e-commerce, incubation of new ideas and technologies, and production services. I guess.
Middle-earth Enterprises is one of Embracer Group’s most significant acquisitions and owns a large IP catalog with worldwide rights to films, video games, board games, merchandising, theme parks and stage productions rights to the company. This includes his Amazon’s The Lord of the Rings, which is set to premiere this September, as well as Warner Bros. Lord of the Rings: War of the Rohirim.
“Other opportunities include exploring additional films based on iconic characters such as Gandalf, Aragorn, Gollum, Galadriel, Éowyn, and other characters from J.R.R. We will continue to offer new opportunities to explore this fictional world through dicing and commoditizing other experiences,” wrote Embracer.
In other news, Nintendo was once working on a multi-platform adaptive controller, and Sony has been accused of blocking Cult of the Lamb’s release on Game Pass.