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In the meantime, THQ Nordic is pushing several original role-playing games at its Gamescom booth this week. Many of these have been in the works since 2013, eyeing a 2017 release.
THQ Nordic's 2025 Digital Showcase revealed a new IP in the form of Fatekeeper, an action RPG inspired by the cancelled ...
THQ Nordic announced this month that it acquired the rights to Kingdoms of Amalur, the vast fantasy franchise from Rhode Island developer 38 Studios, which went down in flames and infamy in 2012.
And these were some sheer drops. Paraglacial, the studio, is located in the German Alps, and it's a locale that has partly ...
THQ Nordic has made a number of self-sabotaging decisions, but that doesn’t mean that the company can’t recover. The first step is for Wingefors to take responsibility for actions taken in his ...
THQ Nordic's 2025 Digital Showcase brought out more details on many upcoming games, along with the reveal of totally new ...
A rundown of all the biggest announcements from the THQ Nordic showcase, including Darksiders 4, and a new RPG IP.
THQ Nordic has a whopping 23 games in development, with 13 of them being unannounced titles. It's likely that these unrevealed games are tied to the THQ properties acquired back in 2013, so there ...
The Vienna-based publisher Nordic Games - THQ trademark back in 2014, a year after it bought former THQ franchises like Darksiders, Red Faction, Full Spectrum Warrior, Destroy All Humans - is ...
THQ died a few years ago, but now it’s coming back. Nordic Games acquired the rights to the name and THQ’s library of titles, and it is rebranding itself today as THQ Nordic.
THQ was a video games publisher up until 2013. When the company closed, the little-known Nordic Games acquired 16 of its intellectual properties, including Darksiders and Red Faction.
Other franchises in the THQ Nordic umbrella include Darksiders, Timesplitters, Kingdoms of Amalur, and Red Faction. This article has been updated to clarify a second THQ Nordic staffer's identity.