Chukong Technologies (also known as Chukong) is an international mobile entertainment platform company headquartered in Beijing. Chukong maintains four core business practices
game engine development mobile game development
publishing an
developer community support
In January 2014, Chukong was named the third largest Chinese mobile developer.
In addition to its headquarters in Beijing, Chukong Technologies also has offices in Menlo Park, Tokyo, Seoul, and Taipei.
In February 2014, sources reported that Chukong Technologies was planning to file for a $150 million IPO in the United States. Within months, plans for the IPO was postponed indefinitely due to lower than expected valuation and was eventually shelved.
History
In 2008, Gary (Guanqun) Liu, a Chinese technologist and software developer, create
CocoaChina.com an Internet forum for Chinese developers to discuss iOS development related topics. In 2009, Haozhi Chen, a serial entrepreneur and angel investor, invested in the forum and established Chukong Technologies as a mobile gaming development company with Liu.
In November 2010, Chukong closed a Series A funding round for $1.2 million from
Northern Light Venture Capital. The company later received Series B ($14 million) from Steamboat Ventures,
Sequoia Capital
Sequoia Capital is an American venture capital firm. The firm is headquartered in Menlo Park, California, and specializes in seed stage, early stage, and growth stage investments in private companies across technology sectors. , Sequoia's total a ...
and Northern Light, Series C ($18 million) from
GGV and previous investors, and Series D ($50 million) led by New Horizon Capital and joined by previous investors. As of February 2014, the company had received $83.2 million in funding.
Chukong’s flagship title ''Fishing Joy'' was developed internally and launched in April 2011.
The company started its third-party game publishing business in 2012. In 2012, the company also invested into Cocos2d-x, an open source game engine, and later acquired the company that maintains the engine. On October 10, 2013, Chukong reorganized its sub-brands under the Chukong Technologies name—the company had formerly operated as CocoaChina—and officially integrated the Cocos2D-x engine into its corporate structure.
Game Development
Chukong’s most successful title to date has been ''Fishing Joy'', a casual game published first in 2011. The game has been especially popular in China, and as of November 2012 the game had been downloaded 120 million times. The game’s sequel, ''Fishing Joy 2'', was also well received by players: In January 2013, Chukong announced that Fishing Joy was making more than $2 million a month on Android, and by March of the same year that figure had grown to $6 million a month and 10 million daily active users.
List of Chukong Games
* ''Fishing Joy''
AndroidiOS
* ''Fishing Joy 2''
iOS
* ''Pocket Climber''
iOS
* ''Cosmic Crashers''
iOS
Game Publishing
Chukong has acted as a third party publishing partner for mobile games since 2012, helping domestic and international game developers distribute and publish games around the world with a focus on the greater China region. On July 26, 2013, Chukong announced that the company was generating more than $12 million a month in revenue, based in part on their developer relationships.
List of Games Published
* ''I’m MT''
* ''Space Hunter''
* ''Chaos Fighters''
* ''神雕侠侣''
* ''Dungeon & Fighters''
* ''Contra: Evolution''
* ''Where’s My Water''
* ''Where’s My Water 2''
* ''凡人修真''
* ''疾风勇者传''
* ''Where’s My Mickey''
* ''Where’s My Perry''
* ''Temple Run: Brave''
* ''Temple Run: Oz''
* ''战国''
* ''Stack Rabit''
* ''MetalStorm Aces''
* ''Asphalt 8''
Developer Forum
Chukong continues to operate th
CocoaChinadeveloper forum founded in 2008.
Cocos 2D-x Game Engine
Chukong Technologies also maintains and leads development on the Cocos2D-x game engine, an open-source cross-platform development engine used by 400,000 developers around the world including leading studios like Zynga, Konami, GREE, and Glu.
References
{{reflist
Chukong: When an opportunist turns into an idealist CMGM.NET. Retrieved 2015-04-29.
Mobile game companies
Software companies based in Beijing
2010 establishments in China