On Monday, Japanese game publisher Square Enix confirmed that it was selling all three of its Western video game studios, along with many significant game series and intellectual property attached to those studios, to the European game publisher Embracer.
The sale includes game studios Crystal Dynamics, Eidos Montreal, and Square Enix Montreal. All three had previously been wholly owned by Square Enix, and Embracer will acquire their entire staffs, combined at roughly 1,100 people, along with popular IP such as Tomb Raider, Deus Ex, and Legacy of Kain, and a game-publishing catalog of "over 50 games," for $300 million.
Not all of the deal's IP has been confirmed thus far, however, and an announcement from Square Enix indicates that its Western operations "will continue to publish franchises such as Just Cause, Outriders, and Life Is Strange." This suggests that Square Enix will retain some of its Western-specific IP and that its future collaborations with Western game makers will come via publishing deals with outside developers.
...or one-fourth of a Gearbox
While console manufacturers Microsoft and Sony have racked up headlines thanks to their own megaton game-maker acquisitions over the past few years, Embracer has quietly built its own roster of predominately European studios over the past decade. It was better known by the name THQ Nordic beginning in 2014 after picking up the rights to that fallen publisher's name (though not all of its games). Its biggest acquisitions in the past 12 months have included video game maker Gearbox Software and board game producer Asmodee Games.
Looking at the balance sheet, however, those two deals each exceeded $1 billion, while today's Square Enix deal falls well short of that number. The discrepancy feels curious in light of Square Enix itself announcing that Tomb Raider lifetime game sales had exceeded 85 million during the series' 25th-anniversary celebration in October. As a comparison, that sales number is neck and neck with one of Square Enix's most beloved game series, Dragon Quest, which had sold over 83 million games as of August last year. Since it's a full IP acquisition, Embracer will likely also claim the rights to Tomb Raider's legacy as a Hollywood film series, though the company has yet to confirm whether previously rumored Lara Croft-related productions, one live-action and one anime, are still in the works.