Improbable may be pissed at Unity, but they still want them back. In a blog post titled “A final statement on SpatialOS and Unity,” the team at the cloud gaming startup aimed to tell their side of the ...
Unity Engine games developed with SpatialOS' cloud-based multiplayer Game Development Kit (GDK) are now in violation of Unity's terms of service, according to ...
Unity Technologies has published a blog post addressing concerns and panic from developers after Improbable announced today that all games using its SpatialOS ...
A pair of highly-funded gaming unicorns are publicly skirmishing and the deal could have major repercussions for game developers. Today, UK-based cloud gaming startup Improbable, announced that Unity, ...
Days after a nasty public split with cloud gaming developer Improbable, Unity has reinstated the company's license and updated its own terms of service to offer what ...
Unity, Improbable and Epic Games have been wrapped up in a bizarre and unnecessarily public dispute about terms of service, and the future of games that run on a much ...
Improbable published another blog in response to Unity's response, clarifying the steps that led to the disagreement between the two entities. Originally, Improbably ...
Improbable, the company behind the ambitious SpatialOS cloud-based game development platform, revealed some unfortunate developments for future and current devs using ...
Gamasutra reports that a change in Unity terms means that developers and now required to obtain a Pro license or Preferred Platform License Key to publish on consoles, something which Sony and ...