Official THQ Auction Results [Up2: Purchase Prices, Runner-Ups Revealed]

patrice desilet.... assassin 1, a little bit of the 2nd one.
why are people on here thinking he's so good again ?

when he left AC games clearly took a nosedive in all aspects after Brotherhood, I think his influence or lack of it in later games can be seen.
 
I wonder if anyone will be buying IP from the shell company for cheap later.

I think that might be how Microsoft and EA got Midway properties.
 
I don't think removing Steamworks for uPlay will result in any delay for the game... For the console version, the PC version would likely be delayed regardless by Ubisoft, so the extra month is perfect to do the change of DRM.

Of course it would; any changes would have to be implemented and run through QA, and this is also true of the console versions which utilise Uplay, too.

There's also the matter of those who pre-ordered the game under the impression it's to be Steamworks, although I suppose in the event of Uplay being implemented Ubi could still ensure keys are Steam-redeemable.
 
I have to imagine that returned to Games Workshop. Hopefully we'll get some info soon.

I do wonder, actually, if one reason Sega went out to get the Warhammer license for a future Creative Assembly title was also with a vague suspicion that THQ was going to go boom further down the line, planning an intent to purchase Relic, and thought it was worth planning to be on good terms with Games Workshop accordingly.
 
I wonder if anyone will be buying IP from the shell company for cheap later.

I think that might be how Microsoft and EA got Midway properties.

I'm thinking this is highly likely.. They may already have and we just don't/won't know about it until later. Hydro Thunder Hurricane being a prime example.
 
Couldn't Koch have just bid 6 million? Was it a closed auction type deal?

*Koch writes 22.3 million and places it face down*

Everyone turns their bid over.

*Everyone's eyes go wide*

Koch: I've made a huge mistake.
lolololol
 
What's with the huge discrepancy between runner-up and winner for Volition? They just went and raised the bid by $17 millions?

Could have been blind bids. Alternatively, just cause second bid is 5 million or whatever doesn't mean that the runner-up bidder wasn't willing to pay more, just wasn't willing to pay more than Koch media when they gave their bid.
 
I wonder if anyone will be buying IP from the shell company for cheap later.

I think that might be how Microsoft and EA got Midway properties.

I guess so,since the big publishers with many studios like EA don't need more studios, they just need the well known IPs for cheap.

hopefully Summoner and Red Faction end up with someone good (aka not EA or Ubi)
 
Contract says that Volition and Saints Row were sold together, but it sounds like that was it. Red Faction and other older Volition IP weren't included.

Same for Relic... they were bought along with the Company of Heroes IP, but none of their other older IP was included.

Wow, real lame if they decided to pick up Volition and not RF, especially if no one bid on RF. Like, they might as well give RF to them as well so its not abandoned.
 
I don't know, I hope it is. I've always felt the engine would come into its own next gen. the destruction tech was some of the best I've ever seen in any game.

GeoMod was an internally developed Volition engine. At least when I was with them nobody else in THQ was using it. I would assume it stays with them in the sale...

Badass tech btw, it'd be great to see what they could do with it on next gen hardware.
 
Sega, keep Relic intact so they can make us a Space Marine 2.

kthx
 
Why do I feel like these crazy low auction prices do not bode well for the future of big budget video game development on the whole?
 
I don't think removing Steamworks for uPlay will result in any delay for the game... For the console version, the PC version would likely be delayed regardless by Ubisoft, so the extra month is perfect to do the change of DRM.

Ubi isn't militant about using uplay (unlike EA for Origin). They've released Steamworks games in the past, released games without uplay and they still release their stuff on Steam. It's unlikely that they would rip open an almost finished game just to change around the DRM in it.

Back on topic, what happens to Homeworld, Freespace etc?
 
I'm implying that Ubisoft would delay the PC version (in comparisons to the console release) regardless of changing the DRM or not!

Switching to Uplay would also affect the console versions as they use it, too.
 
Maybe Koch Media bid not only for Volition, but some of their IPs in that price? Like Saint's Row?
 
I do wonder, actually, if one reason Sega went out to get the Warhammer license for a future Creative Assembly title was also with a vague suspicion that THQ was going to go boom further down the line, planning an intent to purchase Relic, and thought it was worth planning to be on good terms with Games Workshop accordingly.

I had no idea till this thread that Sega had the Warhammer fantasy license so it makes perfect sense they scooped up Relic with the intention of getting the 40k license. A prior relationship and Relic would certainly make for an agreeable licensing situation
 
So what happens to the Titan Quest IP?

Legacy IPs are staying with the shell THQ; presumably publishers who are privately interested will contact them separately and work things out. The good news is that THQ games that are not associated with the franchises that have been purchased shouldn't be pulled from sale just yet.

What did they got?

Microsoft owns Hydro Thunder now.

EA got NFL Blitz
 
Well someone has to pick up Darksiders and Red Faction IPs, if only for the free money they'd get from future steam sales.
 
Why do I feel like these crazy low auction prices do not bode well for the future of big budget video game development on the whole?

What were you expecting? 100 million for a video game studio. Most publishers were in fact in the red this gen. Sony pretty much subsidizes all their 1st party games. And that's probably why MS got rid of all their studios. Who in the right mind is willing to pay tens of millions on pure risk. Even well known studios have been known to go to complete shit in less than 5 years - just look at Bioware.

People these days aren't willing to accept the cold truth that the AAA game development model is completely toxic to the the health of the industry. Hell this is why we are on this thread right now!
 
Legacy IPs are staying with the shell THQ; presumably publishers who are privately interested will contact them separately and work things out. The good news is that THQ games that are not associated with the franchises that have been purchased shouldn't be pulled from sale just yet.

I will send an email to buy Ping Pals I'm dead serious.
 
Actually, the 250k runner-up bid from Turtle Rock themselves for Evolve is kinda sad.

Like a labouring kid that shows up with its savings in the piggy bank and asks with innocent eyes "is this enough to buy my freedom?". And boom, a big publisher comes in, slams a stack of money on the table and snarls "back into the mines, kid".
 
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