Back in 2008, Blizzard Entertainment signed an agreement with Chinese tech giant NetEase to be the exclusive partner for publishing their games in the region. World of Warcraft, StarCraft II ...
parent of Blizzard Entertainment, for US$69 billion last year, has been playing a positive and active role in the negotiation process with NetEase since talks started late last year, according to ...
This new agreement between Blizzard Entertainment and NetEase brings back titles like Overwatch 2 to the Chinese player base. A release posted confirms the good news for Chinese players of ...
Due to an expiring licensing agreement with NetEase, Blizzard is pulling its games from China in 2023. Blizzard Entertainment’s games are about to disappear in mainland China starting next year. The ...
For the Warcraft series' milestone 30th anniversary, Blizzard had some updates to share to capitalize on your nostalgia.
Blizzard Entertainment’s games shut down their servers in China ... following the expiry of a licensing agreement with its old local partner NetEase. According to CNN, millions of players in China ...
NetEase, Inc. is an internet technology ... most popular international online games in China by partnering with Blizzard Entertainment, Mojang AB (a Microsoft subsidiary) and other global game ...
Blizzard Entertainment — the company behind "World ... its servers in China at midnight after a licensing agreement with NetEase Games, China's "World of Warcraft" distribution partner, expired.