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CEO: Ubisoft still open to other partners

Firm remains independen­t despite deal with Tencent

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“We learned a lot along the way and have made meaningful progress with concrete action plans collective­ly led by our leaders.” Yves Guillemot

PARIS: Ubisoft, France’s biggest video game maker, is still open to other partners after a deal in which China’s Tencent will raise its stake in the company, its co-founder and CEO Yves Guillemot says.

Guillemot’s comments, made at a closed press event whose content the company asked not to be made public before a showcase event online on Saturday, came on the heels of a rough day for Ubisoft’s stock, which tumbled 17% after the group announced Tencent would become its single biggest shareholde­r with an overall stake of 11%.

The deal values the “Assassin’s Creed” maker at about Us$10bil (Rm44.9bil).

“We remain totally independen­t and we can act with any outside company if we want to,” said Guillemot, who along his four brothers founded Ubisoft in 1986. “That was a big negotiatio­n with Tencent,” he added. “We can do whatever we want.”

Traders and analysts have said the Tencent deal, which sees the world’s largest games firm by revenue enter into a shareholde­r pact with the Guillemots, removed the speculativ­e appeal of Ubisoft shares.

The group has long been seen as a takeover target as the Guillemots hold a minority stake in the group. Still, the Guillemot brothers managed to fend off a raid by French tycoon Vincent Bollore via his media group Vivendi.

Smaller mobile video game maker Gameloft, formerly led by Yves Guillemot’s brother Michel, was gobbled up by Vivendi six years ago.

The secretive siblings, sons of agricultur­al traders from a small town in Brittany, western France, have vowed to protect their independen­ce, a goal which Yves Guillemot, 62, reasserted on Thursday. “Our first intention is to own our destiny,” he said.

That prospect was tested recently by a combinatio­n of weak financial results and allegation­s of sexual harassment, that led to a revamp of the company’s governance and pledges to change a corporate culture described as sexist by some former employees.

“Yes, we stumbled, and we acknowledg­e that”, Guillemot said. “We learned a lot along the way and have made meaningful progress with concrete action plans collective­ly led by our leaders.”

Ubisoft burnt through about €200mil euros (Rm904mil) in cash operationa­lly during its 2020/2021 financial year, having generated €169mil (Rm764mil) of operationa­l cash flow the year before.

The company’s financial woes came on top of several delays in the release of new video games and heightened pressure on management, in the midst of a boom and merger and acquisitio­n wave in the video game industry.

These were notably marked by Microsoft’s plan to acquire “Call of Duty” maker Activision Blizzard for Us$69bil (Rm310bil).

As part of its plan to return to growth, Ubisoft is aiming to deploy its three “pillar” games – “Assassin’s Creed”, “Far Cry” and “Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six” – on all digital platforms, Guillemot said.

The group aims for these three brands to reach a total of €3bil (Rm13.6bil) in annual revenue within five years, Guillemot said.

Guillemot said “Assassin’s Creed” will release its next edition “Mirage” in 2023.

Ubisoft is also partnering with streaming platform Netflix to develop three original mobile games, including one based on Assassin’s Creed. — Reuters

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