Scopely, owner of Monopoly Go, has bought Niantic's Pokémon GO, Monster Hunter Now, Pikmin Bloom, and more for $3.5 billion.
Scopely, which is owned by a unit of the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, will also acquire Pikmin Bloom and Monster ...
Pikmin Bloom, on the other hand ... utilising a Japanese IP and finding success in that franchise's home market. How Scopely and Savvy Games Group manage Niantic's portfolio remains to be seen. The ...
"Pokemon GO" maker Niantic reached an agreement to sell its gaming business to Savvy Games Group's subsidiary, Scopely, for $3.5 billion, handing the company backed by Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth ...
Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) will pay $3.5bn (£2.7bn) to buy the gaming division of developer Niantic, whose ...
Niantic, the developer of games such as ' Pokemon GO ' and ' Pikmin Bloom ' that utilize user location information, has announced that it will split off its gaming business and sell it to a Saudi ...
Mobile gaming giant Scopely is set to acquire the games division of Niantic, the software developer behind “Pokémon Go,” “Pikmin Bloom” and “Monster Hunter Now,” in a deal valued at $3.5 billion.
DUBAI, NEW YORK] Saudi sovereign wealth fund-backed Scopely has agreed to buy Niantic’s gaming business, including the mobile hit Pokemon Go, for US$3.5 billion. Read more at The Business Times.
Monster Hunter Now and Pikmin Bloom. Scopely may soon be stepping further into the PC and console space, where it already has titles like Stumble Guys and Star Trek Fleet Command. In an interview with ...
Pokémon Go developer Niantic has discussed the game's future following its impending sale to Monopoly Go maker Scopely.
Niantic Labs has inked a deal to sell its games division for $3.5 billion to a Saudi-based company called Scopely. The sale includes Pokémon Go, Monster Hunter Now and Pikmin Bloom.