We're at the end of another week of news, and it is finally officially spooky season, so let the hauntings commence. This ...
It has been one year since Microsoft finally acquired Activision Blizzard for $68.7bn, making history as the biggest company buyout in the video games industry to date. Finally, on 13th October ...
Jason Schreier, author of Play Nice, describes the rise and fall of Blizzard Entertainment, the massive sexual harassment scandal, and sweeping games industry layoffs. Blizzard, the developer ...
Blizzard is developing a new StarCraft shooter under former Far Cry producer Dan Hay, marking its third attempt in the genre. Previous projects, StarCraft: Ghost and Ares, were both canceled, but ...
While hopes are high, the wider Chinese economy—in particular its languishing property market—will take longer to recover.
Microsoft acquired the game when it purchased Activision-Blizzard, which was finalized last year. Over the summer, World of Warcraft gained its latest expansion, The War Within, and it has been ...
StarCraft has largely been dormant since Blizzard stopped updating StarCraft II in 2020 to focus on the future of the franchise. But now, there's a report that Blizzard is taking another stab at ...
Now, let’s take stock of what we actually got: All of this should be read with the context of the extensive layoffs at Blizzard, turnover due to the company’s reported work culture ...
In 2012 Blizzard Baja placed 8 th among nearly 100 teams in the Baja ... all while keeping performance equal to or better than the performance of stock snowmobiles. The Clean Snowmobile Challenge ...
Not much more is known about it. James Phinney, a lead designer at Blizzard, tried to get a turn-based strategy game called Shattered Nation off the ground at Blizzard in the 1990s. It was ...
NEW HOPE, Minn. — Metro Meals on Wheels hosted its annual "Blizzard Bag Blitz" in New Hope on Thursday morning to ensure seniors have access to shelf-stable meals during storms this coming winter. It ...
It is too early to tell if China’s weeklong blizzard of stimulus will reignite flickering growth. But its impact is already unmistakable in one corner of the economy: Red-hot stock markets.