- Netflix Games sells Cozy Grove developer Spry Fox back to its . . .
Co-founders David Edery and Daniel Cook are retaking ownership of Spry Fox as the studio continues work on its upcoming Spirit Crossing game
- Netflix sells Spry Fox back to founders | PocketGamer. biz
Seattle studio Spry Fox is reportedly getting set to become independent again after Netflix agreed to sell the developer back to its founders As reported by Game File, the developer, which has been building the ambitious MMO Spirit Crossing for Netflix, will be spun off, returning ownership to its original founders David Edery and Daniel Cook
- Netflix Sells Cozy Grove Studio Spry Fox Back to Founders
Unlike Boss Fight and the mooted Team Blue, however, Spry Fox hasn't been closed; rather, it's been sold back to Daniel Cook and David Edery, and will remain operational as an independent studio, according to Game File's report Cozy Grove 's Spry Fox is no longer a Netflix studio
- Netflix sells game studio Spry Fox back to its founders
By mid-2024, Netflix’s game strategy was changing, and Team Blue found its work outside of the streamer’s gaming priorities So, too, it seems, has Spry Fox Spry Fox, however, isn’t shutting down as the Blue team did Instead, it will revert to its pre-Netflix status, owned by co-founders David Edery and Daniel Cook
- Netflix is getting rid of another of its game studios by . . .
As part of the arrangement, Spry Fox founders David Edery and Daniel Cook will be able to shop Spirit Crossing to other publishers for console and PC releases of the game
- Netflix is selling Spry Fox back to the studios founders
Streaming giant Netflix is selling developer Spry Fox back to the company's founders That's according to Game File, which reports that co-founders David Edery and Daniel Cook once again own the
- Netflix to sell Spry Fox back to founders - Game Developer
Spry Fox, the studio behind the Cozy Grove series and in-alpha Spirit Crossing, will soon land back in the hands of co-founders Daniel Cook and David Edery According to Game File, the move appears in keeping with Netflix's changing priorities, evidenced as well by the shutdown of an internal studio known as Team Blue last year
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