Business & Events

A Swedish Billionaire Is Buying Up Rights To Old Video Games To Build A "Gaming Empire"

You might not be familiar with Swedish billionaire Lars Wingefors by name, but if you're even passingly familiar with video games, you are definitely familiar with some of his company's recent acquisitions. Embracer Group, the conglomerate established by Wingefors (and in which he owns a 21 percent stake), has acquired hundreds of game companies and the rights to titles like "Tomb Raider," "Duke Nukem," and even licensed games including multiple "SpongeBob SquarePants" titles, with the eventual goal of churning out shiny new remakes of beloved favorites at big profit margins. And it's this video game empire, and the man building it, that was the recent subject of a Los Angeles Times profile.

Wingefors is a successful financier who got his start in business as a young person selling old comic books and video games outside Karlstad in Sweden. He dropped out of high school to concentrate on his first business, Nordic Games, which eventually grew to multiple retail locations in Sweden before he eventually sold the business for a reported $7 million. After that, Wingefors founded another video game resell business called Game Outlet Europe. He also helped to finance the hit Nintendo Wii karaoke game "We Sing," which brought him deeper into the business side of the video game world. And despite his seeming passion for video games, he told the LA Times that it's that business side of the field that he's really interested in:

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"I grew up playing 'Commodore 64.' I liked games like any other young person growing up in Sweden. But for me it's been more about the people, the industry, the business that gets me excited."

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