Sony Ericsson president interested in tapping Sony’s strength in the gaming market.
Mobile games drive revenue increase for French publisher.
Nokia's smart online store offers dynamic new features.
Subatomic Studios takes best achievement in art and Zenbound wins new iPhone award.
Travis Boatman shows Scrabble Connect with Facebook, previews 12-plus games.
EA confirms more games for the popular gadget.
How did EA learn from the mistakes made on Spore and SimCity?
Low-cost, simple and mobile-powered, Zeebo may have found the keys to tapping into emerging markets.
Why the iPhone has changed everything, and how Young's ngmoco will play a big role in mobile's future.
Company’s game segment drives business growth, with Resident Evil 5 and Street Fighter IV shipping a combined six million units during the fourth quarter.
CEO Bobby Kotick says there’s “a lot of runway” for the current hardware cycle.
Drawing the pixels between rhythm action and Pong shows how far games have come, but is it far enough?
LittleBigPlanet’s art director reveals new DLC plans and talks about the indispensability of the individual and the value in copying.
Having unveiled his studio’s new racer, Blur, Bizarre’s creative director describes life after independence.
Suda51 continues his series of views of Grasshopper Manufacture's studio, this time revealing his love for chairs.
Steven Poole calls out the difference between childish and childlike.
Randy Smith continues his exploration into making games that are no fun to play.
Final Fantasy XIII leads Japanese technical achievement and console sales, but does its beauty hide old ideas?
Forget the price of a PS3: the first ever videogame ran on a $120,000 piece of hardware. We go back to the summer of 1962.
Kicking off a weekly series of Making Of features, the story of how Sony created the console that redefined the game industry.
The many roles taken by Obsidian's leading man, designer of Fallout 2, Planescape: Torment and Alpha Protocol.
Sony has issued a rallying cry to PSP owners, but is it too little, too late for a format that's fallen by the wayside?