Yorkshire Post

ROOM SERVICE

Sumo completes £2.2m deal for game developer and gets foothold in South

- ROS SNOWDON CITY EDITOR Email: ros.snowdon@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @RosSnowdon­YPN

GAMES DEVELOPER Sumo Group, which develops games for Microsoft, Sega and Sony, has bought award-winning game developmen­t studio The Chinese Room for £2.2m.

Sheffield-based Sumo said the deal will provide new intellectu­al property, creative talent and the opportunit­y to develop a new studio location in the south of England.

The Chinese Room is based in Brighton and is best known for creating experiment­al, first-person games such as Dear Esther, Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs, Everybody’s Gone to the Rapture and,

most recently, So Let Us Melt.

Dear Esther received several Independen­t Games Festival

nomination­s and the award for Excellence in Visual Art in 2012. Sumo said the game is recognised as creating a new sub-genre of gaming, the ‘Walking Simulator’. Everybody’s Gone to the Rapture, which was developed by The Chinese Room and published by Sony Computer Entertainm­ent, won three BAFTAs amongst many other industry awards in 2015.

The Chinese Room is being sold by its founders Dan Pinchbeck and Jessica Curry.

The total considerat­ion of £2.2m consists of a £1.6m cash considerat­ion and £600,000 through the issue of 357,485 new ordinary shares.

The acquisitio­n will give Sumo intellectu­al property rights over revenue generating games Dear

Esther and So Let Us Melt until late September 2018. It will also accelerate Sumo’s own IP pipeline with the addition of two original concepts, one of which, 13th

Interior, is at prototype demo stage. Mr Pinchbeck has joined Sumo Group as creative director of The Chinese Room and he will be issued with options over Sumo Group shares under the company’s long-term incentive plan.

Ms Curry has chosen to leave the business to continue her career as a composer.

Carl Cavers, chief executive of Sumo Group, said: “I am really pleased with the acquisitio­n of The Chinese Room and that Dan has chosen to join Sumo Digital. We believe his renowned and proven creative abilities will add real value to the business. The Chinese Room has an outstandin­g reputation and its acquisitio­n will enhance and extend Sumo Digital’s capabiliti­es, as well as bringing new intellectu­al property and accelerati­ng our own IP pipeline.

“Having a studio in the south of England opens further doors for the group and we are confident that it will create exciting opportunit­ies.”

Sumo said The Chinese Room is in a creative hot spot, giving it access to a sizeable new pool of UK developmen­t talent, and it intends to invest in the studio.

The Chinese Room is expected to generate a modest revenue on the published games, primarily Dear Esther.

Sumo expects that The Chinese Room and the Brighton studio will together incur a small operating loss through the remainder of 2018, as new staff are recruited, and that the business will be profitable in 2019.

Having a studio in the south opens further doors for the group. Carl Cavers, chief executive of Sumo Group

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 ?? PICTURE: MARK BICKERDIKE ?? NAME OF THE GAME: Carl Cavers, left, said the acquisitio­n will enhance and extend Sumo Digital’s capabiliti­es.
PICTURE: MARK BICKERDIKE NAME OF THE GAME: Carl Cavers, left, said the acquisitio­n will enhance and extend Sumo Digital’s capabiliti­es.

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