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  2. Giant Bomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Bomb

    Content on Giant Bomb comes from the site's staff as well as its community, which contributes to the site's video game wiki database that is open to editing by all registered users. The Giant Bomb staff covers video game news and new releases in the form of video, written articles, and podcasts.

  3. NCSoft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NCSoft

    NCSoft was founded in March 1997 by Kim Taek Jin. In September 1998, NCSoft launched its first game Lineage.In April 2001 the company created a US subsidiary under the name NC Interactive (based in Austin, Texas, and would later become NCSoft West) after acquiring Destination Games, headed by Richard Garriott and Robert Garriott. [5]

  4. List of largest video game companies by revenue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_video_game...

    This is a listing of largest video game publishers and developers ranked by reported revenue over $100 million. Sony Interactive Entertainment is the world's largest video game company, followed by Tencent and Microsoft Gaming. [1] [2] Out of the 59 largest video game companies, 14 are located in the United States, 11 in Japan, and 7 in South ...

  5. Paragon Studios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paragon_Studios

    Paragon Studios was a video game developer, and wholly owned subsidiary of NCsoft.Founded in November 2007 as NCsoft NorCal, the studio's remit was to further develop the City of Heroes and City of Villains franchises following the acquisition of the titles by NCsoft from Cryptic Studios. [1]

  6. Destination Games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Destination_Games

    The Destination Games website was taken down when NCsoft moved its United States headquarters from Austin to Seattle—calling it NCSOFT West—in 2008. [2] NCSOFT Austin employed five people to run the casual MMOG Dungeon Runners, but announced in 2009 that support for this game will be ending in early 2010 due to low subscription numbers. [3]

  7. Auto Assault - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto_Assault

    Auto Assault was a massively multiplayer online game (or MMOG), developed by NetDevil and published by NCSOFT. It combined vehicular combat with role-playing elements, allowing the player to explore a post-apocalyptic future in customizable cars, motorcycles, semis, and tanks. It took inspiration, in part, from the Mad Max series of films.

  8. Netmarble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netmarble

    Netmarble produces role-playing mobile games. As of 2015, it had more than 3,000 employees and served over 120 countries worldwide. In May 2017, Bang took the company public, raising $2.4 billion. [4] Netmarble has developed mobile games including Seven Knights, Raven (Evilbane in the U.S.) and Everybody's Marble.

  9. Exteel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exteel

    Exteel was a third-person shooter game published by NCSOFT, a Korean game company, and was developed by NCSOFT's E & G Studios. Players controlled giant vehicles called Mechanaughts ("mecha") and fought against the computer, or against other online players, in a variety of gameplay modes. The Mechanaughts were customizable.