Features

Amazon buys Twitch, we dive into gaming for wearables, and Glu is #1 iOS publisher for July

The past 7 days in bite-sized portions

Amazon buys Twitch, we dive into gaming for wearables, and Glu is #1 iOS publisher for July
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Unless you've been living under a rock, you'll know that the biggest news of the week was Amazon's $970 million acquisition of Twitch.

However, even though Amazon's deal, quite rightly, stole the show, the rest of the industty has been doing its best to grab our attention.

HandyGames' CEO Christopher Kassulke and Funky Whale CEO Antonio Rabanera both revealed how they plan to break into the world of wearables, while Glu Mobile completed it's miraculous U-turn by ending July as the world's biggest mobile publisher.

Followings its purchase, Twitch also announced that Gameloft's Heroes of Order & Chaos will become the first mobile MOBA to feature its integration.

Of course, that's merely the tip of the iceberg, so, go and make yourself comfortable while we prepare another mind-altering dose of Week That Was.

Industry Voices
  • RedLynx duo Justin Swan and Kari Silvennoinen explained why free-to-play was their only option.
  • TIGA announced that Miniclip, Matmi and Bossa will speak at its Tablet Games conference.
  • We found out how AppSealing protects your Android games from hacking.
  • Funky Whale CEO Antonio Rabanera spoke to us about making games for the potential 21 million smartglass market.
  • Christopher Kassulke, CEO at HandyGames, revealed why he's looking to take a leading role in the world of wearables.
Monetisation
User acquisition, retention, and discovery

Tools & Platforms
  • Streaming platform Twitch announced that Gameloft's Heroes of Order & Chaos will be the first mobile MOBA to feature its integration.
  • Monetisation company TinyLoot revealed it intends to turn free-to-play on its head by paying consumers to play.
  • Toyze partnered with Pou to enable 3D-printed personalised pets.
Funding, acquisitions, personnel and shutterings
Chris Kerr
Chris Kerr
What do you call someone who has an unhealthy obsession with video games and Sean Bean? That'd be a 'Chris Kerr'. Chris is one of those deluded souls who actually believes that one day Sean Bean will survive a movie. Poor guy.