White Wolf Bought By Paradox

White Wolf, the company that originally brought us the World of Darkness RPG lines, has been owned by CCP (the Icelandic firm which produces Eve Online) for some years now. That company's plans originally involved A WoD MMO, but that go cancelled last year. As far as the tabletop RPGs went, these were licensed to Onyx Path, a company founded by ex-White Wolf staff, and also include Exalted, as well as the various iterations of the Vampire, Werewolf, etc. lines. Well, White Wolf just got bought by the Swedish company Paradox Interactive.

White Wolf, the company that originally brought us the World of Darkness RPG lines, has been owned by CCP (the Icelandic firm which produces Eve Online) for some years now. That company's plans originally involved A WoD MMO, but that go cancelled last year. As far as the tabletop RPGs went, these were licensed to Onyx Path, a company founded by ex-White Wolf staff, and also include Exalted, as well as the various iterations of the Vampire, Werewolf, etc. lines. Well, White Wolf just got bought by the Swedish company Paradox Interactive.

This means that Paradox - a computer games company, like CCP - now owns all those properties. There's no information on whether or not this will affect Onyx Path's tabletop RPG licenses, but Paradox - which calls this its "biggest investment ever" and cost "several tens of millions" of Swedish Krona (divide by 10 to get approximate US dollars) - is likely to pursue the video game angle. White Wolf is going to be operated as "an independent entity with a dedicated team."

Paradox's Shams Jorjani said "We’ve been huge fans of the White Wolf IPs for a long time especially World of Darkness/Vampire. Gonna be great to give it some fresh blood."

Also of interest is that Pradox's Fred Wester says that Vampire is "the world’s second best-selling role-playing and is special because half of all players are women." I'm not sure how true the first half of that sentence is -- Dungeons & Dragons and Pathfinder pretty much vie for the top spot.

“We’ve been negotiating with CCP for the last year on acquiring White Wolf Publishing and the underlying brands,” Paradox chief executive Fredrik Wester told GamesBeat. “They have sold 5.5 million books, and it’s still the second-best-selling RPG of all time behind Dungeons & Dragons. It adds a lot to Paradox portfolio.”

He also said, regarding licensing, "We’re going to start licensing out the brand again from the beginning. We’ll start with one World of Darkness. We’ll start, basically, from day one to unite the community under one flag."

Onyx Path development producer Rose Bailey said "We knew this deal was brewing, but can't talk about it right now. As far as I know, this includes all White Wolf games still owned by CCP, including both Worlds of Darkness and Exalted. It does not include White Wolf games now owned by other people, such as Scion, Trinity, and Scarred Lands." Onyx Path has been producing the tabletop RPG under license since CCP acquired White Wolf.

As far as existing licenses like Onyx Path's go, it looks like a period of reassessment is coming. Paradoz's Tobias Sjögren said "White Wolf will evaluate all standing relationships with the focus on continue to work with the ones that aligns with our vision of the brand, and also then find new partners to complement the story going forward." Shams Jorjani said "If it makes sense [Paradox] might publish some WW stuff. But our business will stay the same publishing great strategy, management and RPG games."

Onyx Path said the following: "We're touched that so many of you are concerned for us! Thanks for your faith in us. We'll have more to say when we can. Stay tuned."

Here's the official press release:

"STOCKHOLM - Oct. 29, 2015 - Paradox Interactive, a global games developer and publisher, today announced the acquisition of White Wolf Publishing from CCP Games in an all-cash deal. Now a subsidiary of Paradox Interactive, White Wolf Publishing is a licensing business that owns and manages intellectual properties including World of Darkness, Vampire: The Masquerade and Werewolf: The Apocalypse. Led by CEO Tobias Sjögren, former EVP of Business Development at Paradox, White Wolf Publishing will operate as an independent entity with a dedicated team.

White Wolf Publishing has a long history of producing gaming universes that span mediums, including tabletop and collectible card games, PC games and books. Paradox Interactive acquired all of White Wolf’s brands, and its new subsidiary will pursue development opportunities across relevant categories of games under the White Wolf Publishing name.

“Like Paradox’s games, White Wolf’s properties have dedicated, passionate communities. While there are similarities in spirit, White Wolf’s IPs have very different themes than Paradox’s titles, and deserve their own brand and team,” said Fredrik Wester, CEO and President of Paradox Interactive. “We have great respect for White Wolf’s gaming worlds and see big opportunities for their expansion in the future under our new subsidiary.”

“Over the last 20 years, I’ve had the opportunity to work with beloved studios like DICE and Paradox on the business management side of games, and as a developer earlier in my career. I look forward to bringing my experience to bear as we pursue new ways to interact with White Wolf’s universes,” said Tobias Sjögren, CEO of White Wolf Publishing. “The White Wolf IPs are well suited for all kinds of media and we see great potential to expand them in the future.”

"At CCP, we have great admiration for the White Wolf brands and communities, and it was extremely important to us that the acquiring company share the same respect and understanding,” said Hilmar Veigar Pétursson, CEO of CCP Games. “With Paradox, we know we are leaving the brands in good hands."
 

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I don't really care about MMOs, and any regular videogames based on the property would have to be REALLY good to get my interest.

I love oWoD and hate most of nWoD, with the exception of the Prometheus line. I don't care about metaplots and stuff like that, either.

When it comes to the tabletop games, for me it gets down to how Mage is handled. The original version is one of my favorite games. I absolutely loathe what they did with it in nWod. If they make Mage good again, I might give them a chance. If not, I'll stick with my dozens of oWoD books.

The Chaosium situation has not improved much since the restructuring and they are moving very slow when it comes to fixing their existing issues and the Kickstarter boondoggle. It will be interesting to see if Pardox moves any faster.
 

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I went to fire up my old White wolf Fourm ID to ask about a new mage idea I had using my M20 book... then I remembered it got moved to Onex path... so I searched them out, made an ID, and 5 mins later found this news... How did I miss it here on enworld?

Well I'm happy but worried. I would love for an announcement to say they want classic World of darkness feel (cam vs sabot, cain is first vamp, mage vs technocracy, were wolf tribes ect) with some of the more updated mechanics of Nwod, and maybe some new boost in the arm flavor thrown in. (Hey promthian was awesome, I like Nwod demon) and most important like Nwod all made to work togather from the start...

but that's a pipe dream
 


That Escapist Article is interesting to me because they state they intend to make one whole "WoD" out of all this, a unifying setting that replaces (or combines) the oWoD and nWoD. That could be a good idea, but no way existing fans will be happy. From reading the quote it sounds like something an excited executive at Paradox would say who hasn't really delved into the sordid history of White Wolf's different editions and the reasons they arose in the first place.
 

Fasckira

First Post
That Escapist Article is interesting to me because they state they intend to make one whole "WoD" out of all this, a unifying setting that replaces (or combines) the oWoD and nWoD.

The White Wolf website states similar too, be great to actually get some more concrete info.

I'd hope that, especially considering the amount of money involved, Paradox had spent some time planning this before going public. Im trying personally to avoid speculating too much but its hard not to!
 

Are you talking about a new WoD mixing the two previous one, Garou vs Urantha? Sorry, too many supernatural creatures and it becomes a Jurrasic Park for Hammer-movies monsters.

I have got my own version of WoD but it is more like a sci-fi Exalted.
 

prosfilaes

Adventurer
The Onyx Path weekly mailing is mixed. They didn't talk to Paradox before the sale, and haven't really talked in depth to them now. They say "Paradox has been nothing but friendly in their communications with us so far." and the head guy at the new White Wolf "and I will be talking in detail later this week and I certainly expect to have a better idea of their plans after that." They put a lot of emphasis on the stuff they own: "Therefore, Scion 2nd Edition, the Trinity Continuum, Scarred Lands, Cavaliers of Mars, and Pugmire are not affected by the Paradox buyout of WW. So they're probably steeling themselves for the loss of those licenses. I would hope (and would believe) that Onyx Path's contracts mean that they can fulfill all their existing Kickstarters.
 


White Wolf lost me when they switched to the nWod, and I really haven't cared for Onyx Path's handling of WoD stuff since then, so maybe third time's a charm. I'm not holding out a lot of hope, but in the end it doesn't really matter. I have all my oWoD materials and I'm not planning on getting rid of them.
 

prosfilaes

Adventurer
http://theonyxpath.com/shattered-sm...pered-capped-and-topped-monday-meeting-notes/ is this week's notes. Given "Very pleased to say that we’ve been OK’d to go ahead with the Changeling: the Dreaming 20th Anniversary Edition Kickstarter that we’ve planned for December into January. ... As for the rest of my meeting with Tobias and Martin, I can only say that it was fantastic and I’m looking forward to the time when plans have all been solidified and we can share them with you all."

If I assumed that that's mostly PR, I could imagine vicious arguments about contracts and Onyx Path getting the WoD licenses pulled as quickly as Paradox could do under the licenses.

Seriously, it's all good news for Onyx Path lovers. If Paradox had been planning to pull the licenses, they probably wouldn't have let the C:tD Kickstarter go ahead. If they did given the state of the contracts and the work Onyx Path has already put into it, I think richt would be less positive, even communicating the same lack of information.

(No matter what you don't like about Onyx Path, I think it's thin hope to imagine that their successor would change it in the way you want.)
 
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