San Francisco Chronicle

Netflix buying game studio

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Netflix said on Thursday that it was buying Boss Fight Entertainm­ent, a small independen­t video game studio based in Allen, Texas, as the video streaming company pushes further into the lucrative video game market. The acquisitio­n of Boss Fight, a mobile game developer with 130 employees, is Netflix’s third studio purchase since it set its sights on the gaming industry last summer. The company bought a studio called Night School in September, and this month it bought Next Games. Netflix would not say how much it paid for Boss Fight. Netflix has far fewer developmen­t studios compared with companies like Microsoft and Sony, which produce gaming consoles and hit titles like “Halo” and “Spider-Man.” And its acquisitio­ns have been narrower in scope. But the deals point up Netflix’s emerging strategy as it aims to catch up to its competitor­s. Mike Verdu, who was brought on to lead Netflix’s gaming push after working at Facebook and Electronic Arts, said Netflix intended to distinguis­h itself using the brand appeal of its shows, which could be turned into games. A game based on a Netflix hit could interest gamers purely through name recognitio­n, even if Netflix does not yet have a reputation for making popular game titles. Netflix executives believe the company can offer a connection between its popular streaming shows and related games “and stories that they love in between seasons of a show or in between movies,” Verdu said. He said Netflix would eventually create new, original games, rather than rely on buying games made by outside studios.

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