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Tuesday, July 7, 2026
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NCSoft036570.KS

KOSPICommunication Servicesncsoft.com

About NCSoft

NCSoft is one of Korea's original online game developers, best known for the Lineage franchise of massively multiplayer role-playing games. Founded by Kim Taek-jin, who remains at the helm, the company converted its PC-era titles into mobile successors such as Lineage M and Lineage 2M, which monetize through in-game purchases of items and character enhancements. Other properties include Aion, Blade & Soul, and the Guild Wars series from its U.S. studio ArenaNet, and it has pushed into new genres and Western markets with titles such as Throne and Liberty. Development is done largely in-house, and revenue is concentrated in item sales.

The structural criticism and the appeal are the same thing: reliance on the Lineage universe and its high-spending domestic player base. Monetization leans on randomized item mechanics that face persistent regulatory scrutiny in Korea and complicate exports to markets with different norms, so geographic diversification is the long-running strategic question. Revenue skews domestic relative to global gaming peers. Founder leadership concentrates decision-making, and the company's history of dividends and buybacks keeps capital-return policy on investors' agendas. Hit-driven economics mean pipeline execution matters more than in subscription-style businesses.

Kim Taek-jin founded NCSoft in March 1997 after working on early Korean word-processing software and online services at Hyundai Electronics. The 1998 release of Lineage, among the world's first mass-market online role-playing games, arrived just as Korea's broadband build-out created millions of players, and its income financed two decades of expansion. The company acquired the Seattle-area studio ArenaNet in 2002, yielding the Guild Wars franchise, and shipped Aion in 2008 and Blade and Soul in 2012. Mobile remakes of Lineage from 2017 onward renewed the flagship franchise, and Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund later became a major shareholder.

NCSoft's games are long-lived service businesses: persistent online worlds where revenue flows from players buying items, enhancements, and conveniences, so a title released years ago can still rank among Korea's highest-grossing games. This model front-loads development cost and rewards retention, making update cadence and in-game economy management the operational core. The company keeps development in-house across large internal studios, an approach that deepens franchise control but concentrates hit risk. Its Purple platform links PC and mobile play. Internationally, NCSoft licenses its intellectual property to partners and has used Western publishers to carry new titles into overseas console and PC markets.

Company profile by LineVest editorial. Journalism, not investment advice. Commission a full DART-based report on NCSoft

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Frequently asked questions

What does NCSoft do?

NCSoft develops and publishes online and mobile games, best known for the Lineage series of massively multiplayer role-playing games, along with Aion, Blade and Soul, Guild Wars, and Throne and Liberty. Revenue comes mainly from in-game purchases made by players of its live-service titles.

Who controls NCSoft?

Founder Kim Taek-jin is NCSoft's controlling shareholder and long-time chief executive, holding the largest individual stake. Major outside shareholders have included Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Korean institutional investors. There is no holding company; control combines the founder's stake with his executive leadership.

How can foreign investors get exposure to NCSoft?

NCSoft trades on the Korea Exchange's KOSPI market under ticker 036570 and features in the main Korean benchmarks, so both direct brokerage access and Korea index funds provide exposure. Global gaming-themed funds have also held the stock among their Asian positions.

Answers are editorial summaries for general information, not investment advice.

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