DeNA today announced its financial results forecast for the first quarter of fiscal 2012 (April to June 2012), and things aren’t looking too bad – in the light of the recent complete (kompu) gacha shock and the regulation that came with it. Because of the kompu gacha shock, DeNA decided...
DeNA And GREE Are Getting Hammered At The Tokyo Stock Exchange Again [Social Games]
Thank god it’s Friday (and the end of the trading week) for Mobage operator DeNA and GREE: both stocks got hammered again at the Tokyo Stock Exchange today, closing a terrible five trading days overall. Investors apparently sold the stocks as a response to margin calls – this is...
Report: Japan’s Social Gaming Companies Plan To Set Up Trade Organization [Social Games]
As I have been saying repeatedly, the “kompu gacha” shock in Japan’s social gaming industry is far from over, at least as far as the aftershocks are concerned. A new report suggests that the main players in the sector are continuing to work on ways to prevent the government from...
What Does “Real-Money Trading” Of Virtual Items Mean? [Social Games]
Apart from gacha (and complete gacha in particular), real-money trading is another area for which Japan’s social gaming industry has been under fire in recent months. What is real-money trading? Real-money trading (RMT) describes a phenomenon under which virtual items are being sold for real...
Social Game Maker KLab Moves To 1st Section Of Tokyo Stock Exchange [Social Games]
Tokyo-based Klab played a major role in the “kompu gacha” shock story that rocked the Japanese social game industry in the last week. The company is one of Japan’s biggest 3rd-party social game makers and developed titles on Mobage, Yahoo-Mobage, Mixi, GREE, and Nico Nico Douga...
GREE And DeNA Shares Go Up On Thursday [Social Networks]
In the aftermath of the “kompu gacha shock” that hit Japan’s social gaming industry hard yesterday, shares of GREE and Mobage operator DeNA rebounded today at the Tokyo Stock Exchange, after opening bid-only. It was the first time in four trading days for the two companies to see...