Green Man Gaming is an online video game retailer, distributor and publisher in Britain. It has a multi-platform catalog of 9,000+ games from more than 1,350 publishers, selling games in 195 countries.[1]
Green Man Gaming’s Publishing division lets independent video game studios opt for a mixture of services for publishing.[2]
History
In 2009, Paul Sulyok opened Green Man Gaming with Lee Packham. Green Man Gaming officially started trading on 10 May 2010. [3]
Callum Jay joined Green Man Gaming as CFO in 2011. He was a finance direction at Miniweb Interactive, Morgan Stanley Capital International and at the Tomb Raider publisher, Eidos.[4][5] Tim Sawyer also joined Green Man Gaming as their EVP Operations in 2011.[6] After a year-long silence at Twitter to develop Tweet Deck's iOS, Lee Packham returned to Green Man Gaming as Co-Founder and EVP Engineering.[4]
On 9 July 2012, Green Man Gaming made public that it connects with Playfire.[7] Playfire had more than 1.2 million users, tracking over 50,000 video games on the website allowing users to automatically track their gameplay and in-game achievements or trophies from Steam, PlayStation Network, and Xbox Live.[8] At the end of July 2012, Green Man Gaming expanded its multi-platform portfolio to include selling boxed games, and PC-DVD, Xbox360, Xbox One, PS3, and PS4 games, as well as consoles and peripherals.[9]
In March 2014, trade publication MCV CEO said that Paul Sulyok was one of the 100 most influential people working in the British video games industry.[10]
In October 2016, the company made an agreement with Sony Interactive Entertainment to sell digital titles for PlayStation 4 consoles through redemption keys.[11] Sony stopped selling redemption keys by March 2019.[12]
In March 2017, Green Man Gaming started eCommerce. It was the first website in local language in Germany.[13] Then Green Man Gaming made sites in 10 different languages including Chinese and South Korean. [14]
In April 2017, Paul Eibeler, who was a Take-Two CEO,[15] took the position of an Advisor.
In February 2021, Green Man Gaming united with Payload Studios.[16]
Published games
Controversy
In 2015 Green Man Gaming answered to blames of unauthorised keys being sold on the Store. The majority of keys come directly from publishers, with the occasional need to offer keys for games from publishers that were not able to give them directly due to commercial limitations.[17]
Following this, in November 2015, the company placed information on each game's store page on their site to finf the source of the redemption keys, either through Green Man Gaming directly from the publisher, or through an authorised third-party reseller, for full clarity.[18]
References