Tencent
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The new game from the makers of Delta Force looks like Hunt: Showdown moved to Silent Hill
By Andy Chalk published
news Team Jade's new shooter was revealed during today's Opening Night Live event.

In 15 years of interviewing AAA game developers, I think this is the first time one's straight up told me 'Many people make games for money, but we make money for games'
By Wes Fenlon published
News Well, there it is.

The Tencent survival game being sued by Sony quietly purges most Horizon-like content from its Steam page, bumps release date to late 2027
By Andy Chalk published
news It looks very much like Tencent does not want to tangle with Sony on this one.

After leaving Ubisoft to launch an anime avatar AI/NFT startup, Yves Guillemot's son returns to take charge of its new Tencent-backed Assassin's Creed, Far Cry, and Rainbow 6 subsidiary
By Andy Chalk published
news Meet the new boss.

Game director Soulframe Liang has used his online nickname for so long he even trademarked it in China, and when Digital Extremes and Tencent came knocking for the Warframe sequel? 'I'm not selling'
By Wes Fenlon published
News The game developer behind Phantom Blade Zero owns his unusual name—literally.

Ubisoft and Tencent are forming a new company that will take control of its most successful franchises: Assassin's Creed, Far Cry, and Rainbow Six
By Andy Chalk published
news Tencent will be a minority shareholder in the new venture, which is expected to be completed by the end of 2025.

Ubisoft is reportedly talking to Tencent about creating a new business entity to manage Assassin's Creed and other big games
By Andy Chalk published
news Nothing is finalized yet, but it sounds like Ubisoft is moving toward some kind of new deal that could involve Tencent.

Tencent says it's not a Chinese military company and is willing to sue the US Department of Defense if it isn't removed from a blacklist
By Fraser Brown published
News The conglomerate was one of several Chinese companies given the designation at the start of the year.

Tencent has been designated a Chinese military company by the US Department of Defense, which the conglomerate calls a 'misunderstanding'
By Fraser Brown published
News But several US-based videogame companies, including Microsoft, would be considered US military companies if the same metric was applied to them.
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