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MiHoYo Co., Ltd. [note 1] is a Chinese video game development and publishing company founded in 2012 and headquartered in Shanghai. The company is best known for developing the Honkai series, Tears of Themis , Genshin Impact , and Zenless Zone Zero .
Cai and his roommates secured a CN¥100,000 (US$15,504) grant from the Shanghai Technology Innovation Center's Eagle Program. [1] In January 2011, using the grant, they established miHoYo in a university dormitory while they were second-year graduate students. [7] [11] [12] It began as a literary open source community. [13]
Rank Publisher Country Employees Ref 1. Microsoft Gaming: United States 20,100 [1]2. Ubisoft: France 19,011 [2]3. Electronic Arts: United States 13,700
Liu currently owns 22.6 per cent stake of miHoYo, being the second largest shareholder. [6] In December 2020, Liu was appointed as a non-executive director and a member of the Strategic Development Committee of XD Inc. [7] In July 2022, Liu took on the role of part-time vice president of the Shanghai Federation of Industry and Commerce. [8]
Chinese video games developer miHoYo, which makes Genshin Impact, this week received a rare licence from Beijing to launch a rumoured shooting game to players in China, giving it a leg up against ...
FlyMe2theMoon is the first-ever game in the Honkai series, developed and released as an independent game by "miHoYo Studio" before the establishment of miHoYo company. [ 6 ] [ 33 ] On 28 September 2011, miHoYo released FlyMe2theMoon , a paid game priced at 18 Chinese yuan , on the App Store as an independent developer. [ 34 ]
New York City, New York: $285 million [46] 46 Thunderful Group: Gothenburg, Sweden: $274 million [47] 47 Pearl Abyss: Gwacheon, South Korea: $260 million [48] 48 Neowiz Games: Gyeonggi, South Korea: $250 million [49] 49 Paradox Interactive: Stockholm, Sweden: $248 million [50] 50 Marvelous: Shinagawa, Japan: $190 million [51] 51 Enad Global 7 ...
Columbus City Center (known locally as City Center) was a 1,250,000 sq ft (116,000 m 2), three-level shopping mall in Columbus, Ohio. It was located in the city's downtown, near the Ohio Statehouse, next to the Ohio Theatre, and connected to the Hyatt on Capitol Square hotel. The mall closed and was demolished in 2009.