Playtika buys German games co Wooga

Robert Antokol  photo: Efi Sameach
Robert Antokol photo: Efi Sameach

Market sources put the acquisition price for Berlin-based casual games company Wooga at over $100 million.

Israeli gaming giant Playtika has announced the acquisition of German gaming company Wooga. Playtech has not disclosed financial details of the acquisition, but market sources put the price at over $100 million. Wooga is based in Berlin and employs more than 180 people. It develops "casual gaming" games such as puzzles and hidden objects, and has substantial (but undisclosed) sales. According to market estimates, Playtika's total annual revenue after the acquisition will surpass $1 billion. Playtika's previous casual gaming acquisition, of Jelly Button a year ago, made a considerable contribution to its top line.

Playtika was founded in 2010 by Israeli entrepreneurs Uri Shahak and Robert Antokol. Eleven months later, it was bought by US company Caesars Interactive Entertainment for $130 million, and in July 2016 is was again sold, this time to a private equity group from China led by Giant Interactive, for $4.4 billion. The company's management headquarters nevertheless remain in Israel, and it employs some 500 people in the country, about a quarter of its global workforce. Most of its development work, however, is carried out at sites in Eastern Europe. Development in Israel focuses on data use and artificial intelligence tools.

Playtika VP marketing Nir Korczak told "Globes" that the current acquisition continues Playtika's strategy of diversifying its games portfolio and entering into additional game genres, particularly casual gaming, which now accounts for more than 50% of the company's games offering.

"The big news here is that the games industry is changing, and today you have create high-quality games, and know how to take them to a standard that will make them leaders at a global level, with real growth. For that, you need technology of the highest level, including Big Data and AI, and here at Playtika, that's our expertise. Six terabytes of data pass through our systems every day, and we can look at the data and gain a better understanding of gamers' behavior and give them a better experience, adapted to them. Whoever succeeds in doing that has an advantage in the market." Korczak says that the high standard of AI developers in Israel means that the company will continue to invest in Israel in the future.

Co-founder and CEO Robert Antokol said, "The acquisition of Wooga positions Palytika at the spearhead of the games industry and as one of the global leaders in the casual games category. Playtika's strengths in the use of Big Data, technology, and marketing at a global standard, alongside those of Wooga in creativity and out-of-the-box thinking, together represent a strong platform for creating games that will break through to audiences worldwide."

Published by Globes, Israel business news - en.globes.co.il - on December 3, 2018

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2018

Robert Antokol  photo: Efi Sameach
Robert Antokol photo: Efi Sameach
Tesla V4 Supercharger  credit: PR Ultra-rapid EV chargers on their way to Israel

The new generation of charging stations can fully charge a vehicle battery in five minutes.

Cannabis inhaler co Syqe Medical lays off 50

The company says it is making structural adjustments, mainly in the development department.

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich credit: Noam Moskovitz Knesset Spokesperson Defense Ministry to receive extra NIS 42b

The Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Defense have reached agreement on providing budget supplements for 2025-2026, sources have informed "Globes."

Oren Shoval and Daniel Ramot Photo: PR Via Transportation files confidentially for Wall Street IPO

The Israeli transport solutions company has given no details of the size of the offering, but last time it raised money was at a company valuation of $3.5 billion.

Delek Israel gas station credit: Sivan Faraj Delek Properties completes IPO at reduced valuation

The company raised NIS 173 million from institutional investors at a valuation of NIS 660 million.

BlueWhale unmanned submarine credit: IAI Germany in advanced talks to buy Israeli unmanned sub - report

Germany and Israel are in advanced talks for the sale of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) BlueWhale unmanned submarine, "Defense Network" website reports.

Arrow system credit: Ministry of Defense Spokesperson Defense Ministry chief pushing for Israel Aerospace TASE IPO

Since becoming Ministry of Defense director general, Amir Baram has been promoting plans to sell 30% of IAI at a company valuation of NIS 60-80 billion.

Ashtron chairman Rami Nussbaum and CEO Gil Giron credit: Israel Hadari Ashtrom to build power station near Beit Shemesh

Ashtrom, together with Mega Or and Har Tuv will plan and build the Shimshon power plant at an investment of $1 billion.

Enlight's Re'im project in Gaza border area  credit: Belectric Israel C'ttee nixes solar fields in Gaza border settlements

The Committee for the Preservation of Agricultural Land and Open Spaces will sanction only dual-use, agri-voltaic installations in the "granary of Israel."

Israir aircraft credit: Israir Israir awarded US license for Tel Aviv - New York flights

The Israeli airline plans to operate Airbus A330 aircraft on the route on a "dry" lease, with the company's own flight and maintenance crews.

Exodigo management Photo: Exodigo Israeli underground mapping co Exodigo raises $96m

The company has developed underground scanning systems for construction and infrastructure companies, based on technology developed by officers from IDF intelligence units.

Eilat Port in better days credit: Shlomi Yosef Debt ridden Eilat Port to close Sunday

The Eilat Municipality has seized the bank accounts of the Red Sea port due to tax debts of over NIS 600,000.

Air Canada plane at Ben Gurion Airport  credit: Eyal Izhar Air Canada postpones renewal of Israel flights

The airline cited continued geopolitical uncertainty in the region.

Home rental  credit: Eyal Izhar Rents drive inflation, putting interest rate cut in doubt

The housing item accounted for more than a third of the rise in the CPI in June, and is expected to continue to surge.

Pelephone CEO Ilan Sigal credit: Rami Zarnager Pelephone offers NIS 2b for Hot Mobile

Bezeq mobile telephony unit Pelephone has submitted the offer to Patrick Drahi's Altice International, which owns Hot.

Inflation  credit: Tali Bogdanovsky Inflation again rising, but home prices continue to fall

Israel’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose more than expected in June, but housing prices fell for the third successive month.

Twitter Facebook Linkedin RSS Newsletters גלובס Israel Business Conference 2018