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Why Malmö is the hottest gaming city in Europe

Massive Entertainment may have put Malmö on the map, but there’s more to the city’s gaming industry than its best-known player.

Why Malmö is the hottest gaming city in Europe
Photo: Werner Nystrand

In Malmö, Sweden’s third-biggest city, games are something that are taken seriously.

After all, developing a game that makes $330 million in its opening week is no child’s play. But that’s exactly how much Tom Clancy’s The Division generated for Malmö-based game studio Massive Entertainment when it was released in March 2016.

Its success was soon outshone by news that Massive would partner with Lightbox Entertainment and Fox Interactive to develop several games based on James Cameron’s Avatar world.

The deal will lead to hundreds of new jobs in Malmö and the chance for international developers to work on one of the biggest projects in the world right now.

“Massive has been like a vacuum, sucking up talent from all over the world and bringing it to the region,” says Peter Lubeck, CEO of non-profit, community-driven organisation Game City.

Tom Clancy's The Division was developed by Malmö-based studio Massive Entertainment. Photo: BagoGames/Flickr

He adds that since the gaming behemoth established in Malmö twenty years ago, it has pulled in some of the world’s hottest developers. Many have since gone on to found their own studios in the region or join other emerging companies, expanding the region’s gaming ecosystem.

Start planning your trip to Malmö

There are now around 30 gaming companies in Malmö, ranging from Midnight Hub — a small indie studio of five developers who are currently working on the upcoming mystery game “Lake Ridden” — to gaming giants Massive and Candy Crush developer King which has a studio in the city.

“The gaming industry is Malmö is very supportive and inclusive,” says Sara Casen, studio manager and producer at Midnight Hub. “Big studios rub shoulders with smaller teams and share knowledge over the borders.”

The Midnight Hub team. Photo: Midnight Hub

It’s this community spirit that led the companies to collectively set up Game City in 2013. The member organisation’s goal is to increase collaboration and turn southern Sweden into Europe’s leading game region.

“We’re now the hub for anything to do with game development in the region. We interact with public officials, politicians, and people from other industries that are somehow interested in the games industry or want to collaborate,” explains Lubeck.

It’s the first port of call for anyone looking to get in touch with any of the game development companies in Malmö, organising everything from developer meet-ups to knowledge-sharing sessions, workshops and talks.

Most recently, Game City cooperated with Minc, an incubator for startups and entrepreneurs, to start Minc Game. The extension focuses solely on helping startups turn game ideas into game businesses.

“The games industry has a very specific combination of factors that makes it hard for people outside the industry to understand or support it. So we started Minc Game to help the Minc team with the game companies.”

Start planning your trip to Malmö

In its bid to become Europe’s gaming capital, Malmö is doing much more than nurturing the existing talent. It’s also training up the gaming talent of tomorrow at its university and at the university in nearby Lund to guarantee future growth.

Likewise Malmö’s Game Assembly, an organisation that trains game artists, game programmers, level designers, and technical artists, has educated seven percent of the Swedish games industry. It was named the second-best game design and development school in the world by The Rookies, an annual awards and mentor platform.

But Malmö’s strength as a gaming capital lies in the diversity of its gaming community, which encompasses much more than developers and designers.

In November 2017, Ludwig Sandgren set up The Final Tribe, a new eSports club based in the city. 

The fast-growing electronic sports (eSports) industry sees teams compete in gaming tournaments for prize pools upwards of $24 million.

The DreamHack Masters was hosted in Malmö two years running. Photo: Adela Sznajder/Flickr

“We want to build an eSports legacy based here in Malmö,” says Sandgren. “The plan is to become one of the best eSports companies in the world.”

Along with Malmö e-sport, a non-profit organisation that organises e-sport tournaments and creates training sites for players to meet, there’s huge potential for The Final Tribe to put Malmö on the map for eSports as well as game development.

The Intel Extreme Masters World Championship in 2017 reached over 46 million unique viewers — around 15 million more people than Nielsen reported watched Donald Trump’s inauguration.

Originally from Gothenburg, Sandgren moved to Malmö to form his team and says he feels as though in Malmö he has the chance to make a difference.

“It’s such a vibrant place to be. Coming from a bigger city, it feels like we’re really adding something to the ecosystem and contributing to the growth with something new.”

Indeed, Malmö’s multifaceted gaming ecosystem is what makes the city a bona fide contender for Europe’s gaming capital.

There’s just one final but crucial factor that truly propels it ahead of its competition.

The people, says Lubeck.

“People here are very keen on helping each other. The gaming community in Malmö is the friendliest and most supportive in Europe.”

This article was produced by The Local Client Studio and sponsored by Malmö Stad.

TRAVEL NEWS

Aarhus Airport to get easier connections with new code-sharing deal

Passengers travelling from Aarhus Airport using Scandinavian airline SAS are likely to find more convenient onwards connections from September.

Aarhus Airport to get easier connections with new code-sharing deal

Convenient connections to European hub airports in Amsterdam and Paris will become easier to find from Aarhus Airport from September.

A code-sharing agreement between Scandinavian airline SAS and Air France, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines and Delta Air Lines means that flight codes from those airlines – and more efficient connections via Copenhagen – will appear at Aarhus, the Jutland airport said in a press release on Tuesday.

The agreement gives Aarhus Airport passengers access to over 1,000 European destinations through so-called SkyTeam network.

For example, the code-sharing networks cuts journey times from Aarhus (via Copenhagen) to Amsterdam Schiphol to 2 hours 50 minutes, and to Paris CDG to 3 hours and 50 minutes.

“We are becoming more global. With only 30 minutes’ driving time from Aarhus, people in the region can save a huge amount of time flying from Aarhus Airport to an impressive number of Air France, KLM or SkyTeam destinations,” the airport’s director Lotta Sandsgaard said in the press release.

The agreement “has great significance for the international business environment in the Aarhus region and in a tourism perspective for a booming sector by attracting travellers from European and overseas markets,” she added.

The SK flight code, one of the codes which will be used at Aarhus under the agreement, is operated by Air France and KLM from their respective hubs. This means destinations including Marseille, Bordeaux, Nantes, Porto, Newcastle, Southampton, Cardiff, Venice and Naples as well as Marrakesh, Tunis and Casablanca in North Africa can be booked.

Destinations including Las Vegas, Denver, Seattle, Orlando, Cincinnati, Montreal, Vancouver, Detroit and Salt Lake City and more can also be booked with Air France and KLM to and from Aarhus Airport.

Travellers in Aarhus will also see new connections between SAS and Delta-operated flights to dozens of destinations across the USA and Canada via Delta’s North American network. The deal means they can travel to these destinations with one check-in at Aarhus Airport’s SAS counter.

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