Investor snapshot: EA falls below $50
Game concerns slump amid Wall Street sell-off; only Eidos finishes higher.
Game concerns slump amid Wall Street sell-off; only Eidos finishes higher.
EB gains a buck; GameStop, THQ, Activision, and others climb as Fed eases inflation concerns.
Game sector tepid in a weak day for Wall Street; EA slumps, flirts with $50.
Game sector was mostly quiet Friday as Wall Street's winning streak is snapped.
Most see miniscule gains as Wall Street investors show caution.
Most industry stocks headed south Tuesday, but retailers and Eidos were on the rise.
EA, THQ, Take-Two show gains; Vivendi and Jamdat finish lower.
Share prices ended mixed on the first day of April; plus, a look back at how share prices changed over the past quarter.
EA, EB, Take-Two, and others are back on the skids; Eidos gains as moment of truth looms.
Shares in THQ, Take-Two, EA, and EB gain more than a dollar; losses are minor in Wednesday's trading.
Most game stocks slump; Atari and Midway shares rise slightly.
ELBO shares spike 10.5 percent; EA sputters while other game stocks stay relatively even.
Analysts were split this week on the future of the game industry, and on whether Electronic Arts' shares will bounce back--or whether they're reasonably valued where they are.
Retailers continue to climb, and EA sees first earnings in days; Eidos shares down slightly as the week draws to an early close.
Yesterday's sharp losses forgotten; Jamdat, Activision climb, but EA, Take-Two, and THQ still dip.
Most game concerns slump Tuesday following EA's dismal earnings announcement; Eidos stock climbs on Elevation Partners, SCi bidding war.
THQ, Take-Two gain while GameStop, Konami, and EA slide in Monday's trading.
April stock split should make shares more attractive to investors; most other stocks languish Friday after a roller-coaster week.
EA, THQ, Take-Two and others move higher as Wall Street holds steady.
Jamdat, Atari see minor gains as most other game companies stall.
Eidos keeps an even keel as investors remain cool on most game stocks.
Asian chip companies suffer Monday while US investors buy up EA, Jamdat, and Midway; Eidos sees first gain after last week's hearty sell-off.
The game developer, author, and avid gamer discusses ways to create diversity in the game world--and describes some of the double standards that still exist for women.
Eidos continues to plummet, EA and Take-Two also drop; EB, THQ, and others finish the week on a higher note.
The house of Lara slides another 15 percent; EA and Vivendi decline as Take-Two, THQ, EB move ahead.
Eidos loses 23 percent, Jamdat down 6 percent; EA and THQ see healthy gains.
Most companies lose value; Konami and THQ are the only advancers.
Grand Theft Auto publisher attracting investors; EA, Activision, and others see healthy gains Monday.
Web portal launches game-development studio, acquires mobile-games developer Stadeon.
Both firms see shares increase more than $2; most other game shares trended upward over the week.
Upcoming CBS News segment will focus on the Alabama case of a teen who plaintiffs say was inspired to kill after playing Grand Theft Auto.
Washington state bill would hold game companies responsible for "inspiring" real-life violence; Arkansas proposal literally keeps M-rated games out of kids' reach.
Zango contest accepting submissions through July; winner will be announced at Austin Game Conference.
Project Goldmaster to pick a winner from Indie Games Fest finalists at next week's GDC.
Game On: The History, Culture, and Future of Video Games runs through September 5.
Students get time with Splinter Cell, Republic Commando, and Psychonauts during the two-month tour.
Mobile game company reports solid growth; plans 20 new games in 2005, including War of the Worlds.
Take-Two dips, then bounces back in after-hours trading following positive Q1 sales report.
100,000 register for World of Warcraft's Chinese beta test in first hour; testers get access in two weeks.
Massive, Vivendi, Bounce Interactive, Wild Tangent reps will speak alongside industry analysts at the April 14 event in New York City.
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