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Mobile gaming giant Scopely on Wednesday said it has agreed to acquire Pokémon Go maker Niantic's gaming division for $3.5 billion.
Niantic will sell its gaming business to Scopely, including 'Pokémon Go' and 'Pikmin Bloom,' in a deal that transforms the mobile gaming landscape.
By Yan Zhuang Niantic, the company behind the runaway hit Pokémon Go, said Wednesday that it has agreed to sell its video game business for $3.5 billion to Scopely, a company owned by the Saudi ...
The Pokémon card community is up in arms about scalpers hoarding new sets - so I asked three resellers what separates them ...
A datamine of Pokémon GO reveals that the game may be preparing to ramp up ads in the hands of Scopely, much to the concern ...
What just happened? Niantic, the company that enjoyed global success with Pokémon Go in 2016, is selling its gaming division to Scopely for $3.5 billion. In addition to Pokémon Go, the deal will ...
Niantic Labs doesn’t disclose its earnings to the public, but Scopely said in its announcement that Niantic’s gaming business drove $1 billion in revenue last year, and Pokémon Go alone is ...
The deal, announced on Wednesday, also advances Saudi Arabia's ambitions to become the "ultimate global hub" for gaming. The kingdom's sovereign wealth fund, via Savvy Games, bought Scopely for $4.9 ...
“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 ...