• Last Update 2024-11-05 21:21:00

Netflix to launch its own video game studio

World

Netflix is setting up its own video game studio, as it intensifies its efforts to establish itself in the gaming industry.

Based in Helsinki, Finland, it will be led by former Zynga and Electronic Arts executive Marko Lastikka.

Netflix has previously purchased small gaming companies, such as Oxenfree developer Night School Studio.

But the streaming giant is now going further and creating a studio from scratch.

Lastikka is an established figure in gaming, having co-founded Zynga studio - also in Helsinki - which worked on FarmVille 3 under his leadership.

 

Amir Rahimi, Netflix VP of Game Studios, announced the "vision to build a world-class games studio" in a blog post.

"[It] will bring a variety of delightful and deeply engaging original games, with no ads and no in-app purchases."

In April, Netflix announced a loss of 200,000 subscribers, it first quarterly loss since 2011. Its share price dropped by 35%, wiping more than $50bn (£46.5bn) off the firm's market value.

Netflix then lost almost a million subscribers between April and July 2022, the biggest in its history, though it still has more than 220m subscribers worldwide.

Netflix purchased Helsinki-based Next Games in March 2022. It already had a working relationship with the game developer, which made a mobile game based on the Netflix hit series, Stranger Things.

At the time, Next Games was described as "a core studio in a strategic region and key talent market", by Netflix VP of Games Michael Verdu.

Gaming researcher Annakaisa Kultima, who lives in Helsinki, told the BBC that this acquisition would have played a part in Netflix's decision.

"They know how Helsinki works," she said, "and how the development culture works in Finland.

"There are hundreds of games published on a daily basis on the app stores, so in order to really make it there, you have to have the critical knowledge of how to make it happen.

"We have the reputation of doing pretty well for the past decade or two in the game industry, but games are not labelled where they were made.

(BBC)

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