Английская Википедия:Animoca Brands
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox company
Animoca Brands Corporation Ltd. is a Hong Kong-based game software company and venture capital company co-founded in 2014 by Yat Siu and David Kim. The company initially focused on developing mobile games, then shifted to blockchain gaming and NFTs in 2018.[1]
Animoca Brands was listed on the Australian Securities Exchange from 23 January 2015 to 9 March 2020.[2][3]
History
On November 15, 2011, mobile games developer Animoca raised an undisclosed amount of funding in a Series A round led by Intel Capital and IDG-Accel (which tapped its China Growth Fund III).[4] In 2014 Animoca Brands was spun out from Animoca, and the new entity listed on the Australian Securities Exchange in January 2015.[5]
From January to March 2018, Animoca Brands started rolling out Crazy Kings and its sequel, Crazy Defense Heroes generating $2.8 million in revenue in the first three months worldwide.[6]
In March 2018, Animoca Brands launched OliveX, a fitness metaverse company building mobile games to gamify the fitness industry, which spun off from the company in August 2020.[7]
On 15 August 2018, Animoca Brands raised a $1 million investment from Sun Hung Kai and $0.5 million from strategic partner Lympo.[8] On 18 December 2018, Animoca Brands announced that it had completed a US$547,000 placement to institutional and sophisticated investors, a portion of which would be applied towards funding its investment in artificial intelligence accelerator Zeroth.ai.[9]
In May 2019, Animoca Brands raised $2.5 million to fund the development of a blockchain version of the video game The Sandbox, where players can build and monetize their gaming experiences using SAND, the platform’s utility token.[10] Then, in March 2019, Animoca Brands raised another $2.01 million in cash and cryptocurrency for The Sandbox from investors that included Square Enix, B Cryptos, and True Global Ventures.[11]
On 9 March 2020, Animoca Brands delisted from the Australian Securities Exchange.[3]
In September 2020, Animoca Brands launched the blockchain racing ERC-20 utility token "REVV" on Uniswap, which was subsequently listed on various other exchanges.[12]
In May 2021 Animoca Brands raised a first tranche of US$88,888,888[13] followed in July 2021 by the second tranche of US$50 million, both of which were based on valuation of US$1 billion.[14][15] In October 2021 Animoca Brands raised $65 million at a valuation of $2.2 billion from Ubisoft, Sequoia Capital and others.[16][17] In November 2021, SoftBank led a $93 million investment in Animoca Brands' The Sandbox.[18]
In December 2021, Binance and Animoca Brands launched a $200 million investment program to offer funding for blockchain games.[19]
On March 15, 2022, Animoca Brands announced it would shut down the F1 Delta Time game the next day.[20][21] The game had previously been lucrative, holding the record for the most expensive NFT of 2019 and with some transactions exceeding US$300,000. Sales within the game had flat-lined for the two years preceding the game's closure. The company announced plans to replace the game's non-functional NFTs with equivalent tokens for REVV Racing, a separate game which doesn't have Formula 1 branding.[21][22]
On 21 June 2022, Animoca Brands Corporation Limited was convicted on charges of failing to lodge annual and half-yearly financial reports with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission.[23]
In July 2022, Animoca Brands hit $5.9 billion valuation.[24] In August 2022, Temasek with GGV Capital led a $110 million funding round for Animoca Brands at a $6 billion valuation to make it “pre-IPO ready”.[25][26][27]
Notable properties
Notable projects and games include:
Phantom Galaxies, REVV Motorsport, Mocaverse, The Sandbox, GAMEE,[28] Benji Bananas, TinyTap,[29] Crazy Defense Heroes, nWay, Notre Game[30] (founded in 2016), Quidd, Animoca Brands Japan, Pixowl, and Be Media.[31]
Animoca Brands has also licensed games and applications for: The Addams Family,[32] Atari,[33] Care Bears,[34] Fan Controlled Football,[35] Formula E,[36] Manchester City FC,[37] MotoGP,[38] Snoop Dogg,[39] Wonder Park,[40] Marvel,[41] Power Rangers,[42] and the WWE.[43] Former licenses include Formula One.[44][21]
Acquisitions and partnerships
Acquisitions
In July 2016, Animoca Brands acquired TicBits, developer of tower defense games Crazy Kings and Crazy Defense Heroes, for 5.4 million AUD.[45]
In August 2018, the company acquired Pixowl, developer of the video game The Sandbox, for $4.875 million.[46]
In August 2019, Animoca Brands acquired digital collectibles marketplace Quidd for $8 million.[41] In November 2019, the company led a $1.5 million funding round for blockchain game developer Sky Mavis.[47] In December 2019, Animoca Brands acquired Power Rangers game developer nWay for $7.69 million.[42]
In April 2022, Animoca Brands acquired the Lyon-based video game developer, Eden Games.[48] In September 2022, the company acquired MotoGP game developer WePlay Media.[49]
Also acquired:
- Acquisition of TinyTap, June 2022.[29]
- Acquisition of Notre Game, June 2022.[30]
- Acquisition of BeMedia, April 2022.[31]
- Acquisition of Grease Monkey Games, February 2022.
- Acquisition of Eden Games, April 2022.
- Acquisition of Darewise, April 2022.
- Acquisition of Bondly, September 2021.Шаблон:Citation needed
- Acquisition of Blowfish Studios, July 2021.Шаблон:Citation needed
- Acquisition of GAMEE, July 2020.[28]
Portfolio investments
Animoca Brands' has over 450 cryptocurrency as well as non-crypto-related holdings,[50] this include Axie Infinity, OpenSea, Dapper Labs, Colossal Biosciences, MoviePass[51][52] and CryptoKitties.[53][54]
Partnerships
In July 2020, Animoca Brands, through subsidiary nWay, entered into a licensing agreement with WWE to develop a new mobile game on iOS and Android.[55]
Animoca Brands partnered with stc play in 2023 and expanded in the Middle East.[56]
References
External links
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