TiMi Studio Group

Video game developer group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TiMi Studio Group (Chinese: 天美工作室群; pinyin: Tiānměi Gōngzuò Shìqún) is a video game developer group based in Shenzhen. A subsidiary of Tencent Games, it operates branches in Singapore, Los Angeles, Chengdu, and Shanghai. TiMi generated an estimated revenue of US$10 billion in 2020. Reportedly, TiMi is the largest video game operator and developer in the world by revenue.[1] Founded in 2008 as Jade Studio, TiMi comprises several development divisions, developing titles such as Honor of Kings, Arena of Valor, Call of Duty: Mobile, Speed Drifters, Pokémon Unite and Delta Force.

FormerlyTiMi Studios
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
FoundedDecember 3, 2008; 17 years ago (2008-12-03)
Quick facts Formerly, Company type ...
TiMi Studio Group
FormerlyTiMi Studios
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
FoundedDecember 3, 2008; 17 years ago (2008-12-03)
Headquarters,
China
Number of locations
6 (2025)
Areas served
Worldwide
Key people
Colin Yao
(vice president of Tencent & president of TiMi Studio Group)
ProductsNotable Games
ParentTencent Games
DivisionsTiMi-J1|TiMi-J3|TiMi-L1|TiMi-T1|TiMi-Z1|TiMi-G1
Websitewww.timistudios.com
Close

History

2008–2013: Origins as Jade Studio

TiMi began in 2008 as Jade Studio[a] in Shenzhen, China. The studio debuted into the Chinese PC gaming market with QQ Speed[b] (known as GKART and Speed Drifters in Western markets), China's most successful racing game. As of July 2, 2019, Speed Drifters has 700 million registered users, with 200 million registered as mobile players.[2] Following Speed Drifters, the studio released its own massive multiplayer online RPG (MMORPG) titled The Legend of Dragon[c] in 2010 and first-person shooter (FPS) Assault Fire in 2012. In 2013, the studio released their final PC game which is a third-person shooter (TPS) titled Age of Gunslingers before they made their debut into mobile gaming with the release of WeChat exclusive games such as We Match and We Run.

2014–2016: Formation of TiMi Studio Group and Chinese success

In 2014, Jade Studio merged with Wolong Studio from Chengdu and Tianmeiyiyou Studio from Shanghai to form TiMi Studio Group.[3] Following the merge, in 2015, the group's development division TiMi-L1 debuted into mobile gaming with the massive Multiplayer Online Battle Arena (MOBA) game, Honor of Kings. As of July 2019, Honor of Kings is the most profitable mobile game globally of the first half of 2019, earning more than $728 million.[4]

In 2016, the division introduced the King Pro League (KPL); an official competitive esport for Honor of Kings.[d] The KPL marked the division' and studio group' first entry into esports.[5]

2016–2020: Worldwide growth, Arena of Valor, Call of Duty: Mobile and Pokémon UNITE

Following the success of Honor of Kings, in 2016, the group's development division TiMi-J6 released Arena of Valor.[e] The MOBA game was launched for mobile and Nintendo Switch in over 50 countries across Asia, Europe, North America and South America, expanding the group's reach worldwide, with more than 13 million monthly active users reported in May 2019.[6] The game became a part of the esports demonstration event at the 2018 Asian Games, 2019 Southeast Asian Games and 2022 Asian Games.[7][8][9][10]

On March 19, 2019, at the Game Developers Conference (GDC) in San Francisco, California, Activision announced that they were partnering with TiMi Studio Group to develop their upcoming title, Call of Duty: Mobile.[11] The game was developed by the TiMi-J3 division and released worldwide on October 1, 2019. As of October 4, 2019, the game has surpassed 35 million downloads and over $2 million in revenue.[12] In December 2019, the game received an award for Best Mobile Game at The Game Awards.[13]

In June 2020, it was announced that the studio group and The Pokémon Company are developing a new Pokémon game, which was revealed on July 21, 2021, called Pokémon UNITE, a Multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) game for mobile and Nintendo Switch.[14][15][16][17]

2020–2025: Team Kaiju, Code: J, Delta Force

In May 2020, the studio group announced ex-343 Industries and Ubisoft developer Scott Warner as Studio Head in North America.[18] Scott Warner will lead TiMi's Team Kaiju (stylized as TEAM KAIJU), which was revealed on 15 October 2021. The subsidiary is working on one unnamed first-person-shooter (FPS) game for the PC and console market.[19][20]

On June 27, 2020, the studio group and SNK announced a new unnamed mobile game, Code: J, for the classic arcade franchise Metal Slug.[21]

In November 2020, the studio group announced that Honor of Kings set a record of 100 million average daily active users worldwide.[22]

In July 2021, the group established a new division located in Canada, Montréal. The division's classification is TiMi-F1 and the development focus is an AAA open-world game.[23][24]

In May 2021, the studio group announced a strategic partnership with Xbox Game Studios.[25][26]

In June 2022, TiMi L1 Studio, a development division of the group, announced a strategic partnership with Level Infinite on publishing Honor of Kings world-wide, where Level Infinite will take over the publishing, eSports, but TiMi the operations and community. The five versus five video game in the multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) genre will adapt on areas where TiMi L1 Studio's Arena of Valor have a shared eSports with in Honor of Kings World Championship (KCC), under TiMi eSports, but did not reach the expected player base.[27][28][29]

Honor of Kings was launched worldwide on June 20, 2024, following pre-releases in Brazil and Turkey as well as countries in the Middle East, North Africa, and the Commonwealth of Independent States.[30][31]

Delta Force, a free-to-play first-person tactical shooter video game, was released for Windows, iOS, Android, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X and S in 2025.[32][33]

2025-present: Chinese Military Company

In January 2025, TiMi Studio Group's parent Tencent was labelled as a Chinese military company by the United States Department of Defense.[34] After five years without releasing a game, TiMi Montreal was shut down in February 2026.[35]

List of games

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Genre(s) Platform(s) Development division(s)
2007 QQ Three Kingdoms Massively multiplayer online role-playing Microsoft Windows L1
2008 QQ Speed (GKART / Speed Drifters) Racing J1
2011 The King of Dazzling Fighters / King of Combat[36] Fighting J1
2012 The Legend of Dragon Massively multiplayer online role-playing Z1
Assault Fire[37] First-person shooter J3
2013 Age of Gunslingers[38] Third-person shooter J3
We Match[39] Casual Android, iOS T1
Parkour Everyday[40]
We Drift[40] J1
2014 We Fight[41] L1
Fantasy Fighters[42] Fighting J1
2015 Crossfire Mobile[43] First-person shooter J3
Honor of Kings[44] Multiplayer online battle arena L1
2016 Arena of Valor[45][46][47] Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch L1
The Legend of Dragon: Mobile Massively multiplayer online role-playing Android, iOS Z1
2017 Contra Returns Run and gun J1
King of Chaos[48] Role-playing T1
QQ Speed: Mobile / Garena Speed Drifters[49][50] Racing J1
2018 PUBG Army Attack[51] Battle royale J3
Battle Through The Heavens Massively multiplayer online role-playing Z1
Saint Seiya: Awakening Turn-based strategy role-playing L1
2019 Let's Catch Demons Together! / Let's Hunt Monsters Casual J1
Call of Duty: Mobile[52][53][54] Shooter J3
2021 Pokémon Unite Multiplayer online battle arena, real-time strategy Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch J1
2022 Age of Empires: Return to Empire[55] real-time strategy Android, iOS T1
2023 Metal Slug: Awakening Run and gun J1
Party Stars Battle-royal, racing, party T1
2024 Need for Speed Mobile Racing J1
Delta Force First Person Shooter Android, iOS, PlayStation, Xbox, PC J3
TBA Honor of Kings: World Action-adventure TBA L1
TBA Monster Hunter Outlanders TBD Mobile devices and phones[56] J1
TBA Crossfire: Rainbow (Project: Spectrum) First person/Third person shooter, Extraction shooter PC and consoles J1
Close

Notes

  1. Chinese: 琳琅天上工作室
  2. Chinese: QQ飞车端游
  3. Chinese: 御龙在天
  4. Chinese: 王者荣耀
  5. Chinese: 傳說對決

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI