The GAMURS Group, simply known as Gamurs, is an esports media and entertainment publisher. Established in 2014, the group operates multiple brands focusing on the esports and entertainment news markets, including the websites: Dot Esports, We Got This Covered, The Mary Sue, Prima Games, and Escapist. GAMURS is based in Sydney, Australia, with an office in Austin, Texas.[1][2][3]

Quick Facts Type of site, Available in ...
GAMURS Group
Thumb
Type of site
News, media, and technology services
Available inEnglish, Portuguese, French, and Spanish
Founder(s)Riad Chikhani, Phillip Luu, Carl Oehme, Halim Yoo, and Malik Akl
Key peopleRiad Chikhani (Co-Founder & CEO), Geraint Davies (COO)
URLgamurs.group
Users55,000,000
Launched14 February 2016; 8 years ago (2016-02-14)
Close

History

In 2010, at the age of 14, Riad Chikhani, Phillip Luu, and Malik Akl established Rune Gear, a forum for the game RuneScape. They sold the business at the age of 17 to focus on school. Their experience inspired them to develop a similar business, but for a wider variety of games. In December 2014, they joined with Carl Oehme and Halim Yoo to form GAMURS Group.[4]

GAMURS began as a social network for gamers after joining the NRMA Jumpstart program run by the Slingshot Accelerator.[5] Shortly after the program ended, the company raised $500,000 in a seed round.

GAMURS acquired two platforms, TeamFind and CSGOTeamFinder. On February 14, 2016, these sites merged to provide team and player-finding functionality for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and League of Legends. GAMURS raised an additional $500,000 in another seed round in April 2016.[6]

On April 26, 2016, GAMURS acquired esports publication websites eSports-Nation.com, GoldPer10, and eSports.guru.[7] Once the acquisitions were completed, the three platforms were merged, making GAMURS a content provider for titles such as Call of Duty: Black Ops III, Halo 5: Guardians, Hearthstone, and Overwatch.[citation needed] On June 11, GAMURS launched EsportsWikis, an online encyclopedia dedicated to esports.[8] On September 19, it acquired esports news outlet SplitPush.net.[9] On October 28, GAMURS acquired Dot Esports from The Daily Dot.[10][11][12]

On November 9, 2020, GAMURS acquired Pro Game Guides, a source for gaming guides.[13] On June 28, 2021, GAMURS acquired We Got This Covered, a news site for film, TV, comics, and entertainment culture.[14] On November 17, GAMURS acquired the website The Mary Sue, a website intended to highlight women in the "geek culture space" and provide a space for minority and underrepresented voices.[15][16]

On January 3, 2022, GAMURS announced the acquisition of Prima Games, a gaming media company.[17] On February 10, it announced the acquisition of Twinfinite, a website focused on video game news, reviews, features, and opinions.[18] On September 30, it confirmed the acquisition of several websites from Enthusiast Gaming, including Destructoid, The Escapist, PC Invasion, and Siliconera.[19] Their firing of The Escapist's editor-in-chief in November resulted in a number of contributors at the website—notably Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw of Zero Punctuation—resigning and forming a new employee-owned outlet.[20][21][22]

In July 2024, an unknown number of employees were laid off across Destructoid, PC Invasion, and Dot Esports.[23]

On 24th September 2024, a second round of lay off of about 30 employees was made due to "unprecedented shifts" in the industry, specifically relating to Google's Helpful Content update in 2023 and "the decline in Google search and Discover traffic across all sites." Those affected include Dot Esports gaming editor Vic Hood, Dot Esports Australian managing editor Isaac McIntyre, Twinfinite managing editor Tom Hopkins, Destructoid staff writer Jamie Sharp, and PC Invasion senior staff writer Diego Perez.[24]

References

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.