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Update: Amazon (due to new agreement with Embracer) uncancels Lord of the Rings MMO that canceled in 2021 due to dispute with Tencent


Commissar SFLUFAN

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15 hours ago, ManUtdRedDevils said:

What happened? It’s behind a paywall 

 

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The game had been in development at Amazon Game Studios alongside the China-based Leyou Technologies Holdings Ltd., which was purchased by conglomerate Tencent Holdings Ltd. in December. The resulting contract negotiations led to a dispute between Amazon and Tencent that eventually caused the game’s cancellation, said people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the issue.

 

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  • 2 years later...
  • Commissar SFLUFAN changed the title to Update: Amazon (due to new agreement with Embracer) uncancels Lord of the Rings MMO that canceled in 2021 due to dispute with Tencent
3 hours ago, Brian said:
em_me_ag_v3_580x330_WEB.jpg
WWW.AMAZONGAMES.COM

Studio behind 'New World' developing AAA open-world multiplayer adventure set in Middle-earth.

Bezos really wants a LotR MMO. 

 

May we all find someone who cares about us as much as Lord Bezos cares about the Lord of the Rings IP.

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They spent so much money on the license that allowed them to make more than just the TV show, it makes sense they'd try hard to actually use it. Still, until Amazon can actually make a good game, I don't think there's much reason to expect anything worthwhile to come of this.

 

Amazon probably should be the one buying all these big studios. They clearly want to be in games, they have Luna, and they're the leading cloud service provider. If there's a trillion dollar company that should be trying to buy Activision/Blizzard or Ubisoft or EA, there's a good case for it to be Amazon.

 

Not that I'm confident that it would work out for them, but they keep pouring money into these ventures that they built from scratch and it keeps failing. Buying something whole and functional seems like the way to go. If they treat it like Ring and allow it to operate mostly independently while still utilizing some of Amazon's resources, they might actually have a chance. Then again, any of those would be multiple times the size of Amazon's largest acquisition to date (Whole Foods for $13.7B).

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