Everything about Ige totally explained
» For the antibody, see Immunoglobulin E (IgE). IGE is also an abbreviation for the "Eidgenössisches Institut für Geistiges Eigentum", the Swiss Federal Institute of Intellectual Property.
IGE (Internet Gaming Entertainment) is one of the largest
MMORPG services companies, with offices in Los Angeles, Miami, and China. IGE is one of the main players in
virtual economy services, also known in the MMORPG industry as secondary market. Members of the gaming community are often critical of IGE, as its services may allow players to break the rules of online games.
The co-founders of IGE are
Brock Pierce, a former child movie star, and Alan Debonneville. Pierce was also the co-founder of the controversial failed
dot-com Digital Entertainment Network (DEN). Media reports claim that
Marc Collins-Rector is a silent partner in IGE. IGE initially used an address in the city of
Marbella, Spain, where Collins-Rector, Shackely, and Pierce shared a villa until it was raided by
Interpol in 2002
In January 2004, IGE acquired its major competitor, Yantis Enterprises, run by another controversial secondary market figure, Jonathan Yantis for an undisclosed sum.
IGE's parent company, RPG Holdings purchased Allakhazam.com in November 2005 and was announced in May 2006. Allakhazam is a popular MMORPG community site for a wide variety of games that IGE's services cater for; however, the site continues to pride itself on not supporting the trade of virtual currencies in the real economy, typically breaking and/or removing any links to sites (including IGE) that perform such trades. This marks the further expansion of this company's presence in online gaming communities. This purchase followed that of
ThottBot.com.
While many users left because of the purchase, the site is still extremely popular with players of many major MMOs.
Affinity Media was the parent company of IGE, though the company no longer has any ownership stake. Affinity Media's senior vice president of business development John Maffei, noted that "we’re no longer in that business." Affinity retains control of Allakhazam.com, Thottbot.com, and has since purchased
Wowhead.com
Like all the other in-game currency sellers, IGE's vast majority of the revenue comes from selling the
World of Warcraft gold. Its website traffic, and allegedly its revenue has been declining since 2006 for the increased competition from the in-game currency sellers based in China, and the constant bombardment of anti-
real-money trading measures by
Blizzard Entertainment, the publisher of
World of Warcraft.
Games available
Despite the practice being outlawed in most games, as of May 9, 2007, IGE sells in-game items, money, and accounts for the following:
Further Information
Get more info on 'Ige'.
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