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Wemade Founder Sells KRW 920 Billion Stake to China-Linked NeoPulse, Handing Mir IP Control to Alibaba-Tied Investor

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Wemade Founder Sells KRW 920 Billion Stake to China-Linked NeoPulse, Handing Mir IP Control to Alibaba-Tied Investor

Wemade Co. (112040.KS) confirmed Monday that founder and chairman Park Kwan-ho has signed a stock purchase agreement to sell his entire 39.33% stake to NeoPulse—a Korean subsidiary of Hong Kong-based Shengsong Investment—for approximately KRW 920 billion (USD 593 million). The transaction, scheduled to close October 30, 2026, will make NeoPulse the single largest shareholder with a 40.25% holding, marking a complete transfer of strategic control over Korea's longest-running MMORPG franchise.

A Founder's Full Exit After 26 Years

Park, who founded Wemade in 2000 and built the Mir intellectual property into one of the most recognized gaming franchises in mainland China, is divesting his entire personal stake in a single transaction. The KRW 920 billion price tag implies a total equity valuation of approximately KRW 2.34 trillion for the company—based on the 39.33% sold—representing a significant premium to Wemade's market position during its blockchain-heavy years earlier this decade.

No governance restructuring or board composition changes were announced alongside the agreement, though post-closing leadership arrangements are expected to be disclosed before the October 30 completion date.

Buyer Profile: Alibaba Ties and Chinese Gaming Networks

NeoPulse is 100% owned by Shengsong Investment, a Hong Kong-registered private investment platform. The group maintains close working relationships with Alibaba Group and major Chinese game publishers—a strategic alignment that directly targets Wemade's most commercially significant IP market.

NeoPulse cited "world-class MMORPG development capabilities" and the Mir franchise's "strong market presence in China" as its primary investment drivers. Plans after closing center on developing new titles for global markets—particularly mainland China—while integrating artificial intelligence across game development and graphics pipelines.

The transaction positions Wemade as a bridge between Korean game development expertise and Chinese distribution scale, echoing structural deals seen across Asia's gaming industry where Western and North Asian IP holders have increasingly attracted capital from China-linked intermediaries.

Three Consecutive Profitable Quarters Provide Cover

The deal arrives as Wemade is posting its first sustained profitability run in several years. Q1 2026 consolidated revenue reached KRW 153.3 billion, up 8% year-on-year, with operating profit of KRW 8.5 billion—marking the third straight quarter of positive operating income since Q3 2025.

Revenue for the quarter was split across three segments: gaming at KRW 115.2 billion (75.1% of total), Mir IP licensing at KRW 30.5 billion, and the Wemix blockchain platform at KRW 7.5 billion.

A key catalyst for the second half: the resolution of a royalty dispute with Shanghai Kaiying Network Technology over Legend of Mir 2 is expected to accelerate China licensing income from H2 2026 onward. The planned mainland China launch of Mir M later this year provides an additional revenue layer tied directly to the IP that NeoPulse is paying to control.

Regulatory and Sovereign Risk Dimensions

No regulatory filings or foreign investment review processes were cited in the announcement. However, a China-affiliated entity acquiring a 40%-plus controlling stake in a Korean gaming company—one that also operates Wemix, a blockchain-based gaming and digital asset platform—may draw scrutiny from Korea's Financial Services Commission and relevant trade authorities before closing.

Chinese-linked investment in Korean digital content companies has historically proceeded without formal block under Korea's current regulatory framework, but the blockchain dimension adds a layer of financial infrastructure consideration that distinguishes this transaction from pure gaming M&A.

Minority shareholders in Wemade are unaffected by the share transfer in terms of position size. However, the change of effective control shifts strategic decision-making to a China-aligned entity at a moment when Korean gaming and blockchain peers are navigating IP protection, cross-border data governance, and trade-related technology oversight debates.


Sources: Korea Herald · Bloomberg · Sports Khan

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