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Blizzard and Chinese publisher NetEase are parting ways after 14 yearsThe publishing deal between the companies expires in January

The publishing deal between the companies expires in January

World Of Warcraft: Dragonflight is the next expansion for Blizzard’s long-running MMORPG.

There’ll be no moreOverwatch 2andWorld Of Warcraftin mainland China from January 23rd, 2023, Blizzard and NetEase have announced. Those are among the games that NetEase have handled publishing for within the country, but the two companies have failed to reach an agreement to extend their deal. To add insult to injury, NetEase’s president Simon Zhu has taken toLinkedInto blame “a jerk” for the deal’s collapse.

Overwatch 2 Is Not A Sequel, But I Love It All The SameVid bud Liam enjoys Overwatch 2, but doesn’t think it’s much of a sequel.Watch on YouTube

Overwatch 2 Is Not A Sequel, But I Love It All The Same

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Diablo Immortalwill remain available in China because it falls under another deal, but games such asHearthstone, the StarCraft series, Diablo 3, Warcraft 3: Reforged, and Heroes Of The Storm will also lose access to Blizzard game services. Although NetEase’s publishing rights expire in January and sales of Blizzard’s games will be suspended “in the coming days”, Blizzard clarified that upcoming releases of World of Warcraft: Dragonflight, Hearthstone: March of the Lich King, and Overwatch 2 season 2 would still go ahead this year.

In a separatestatement, NetEase CEO William Ding said that “material differences on key terms” were the sticking point that meant both companies couldn’t reach an agreement, but assured players that their data and assets would be “well protected”. Ding insisted that the end of the deal wouldn’t cause any financial issues for NetEase, but theSouth China Morning Postreported that share prices had dropped when the end of the partnership with Blizzard became public.

Blizzard have described the situation as a “suspension”, so services could resume in China for those games at a later date under another publisher. If the two companies manage to revive their arrangement again, or another publisher picks up Blizzard’s games in China, then I’ll let you know. You can read Blizzard’s full statement about the NetEase deal’s expirationhere.

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