You are a super player fable
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“Oh, they don’t want to sell,” he was told. At dinner one evening with his boss, Embracer CEO Lars Wingefors, Karch asked why they hadn’t bought the Metro developer. Over the past two years, the CEO has bolstered Saber Interactive and, in turn, Embracer with a suite of companies, including 4A Games, the studio behind the critically acclaimed Metro franchise. As part of the deal, he sits on the Embracer board, and has turned from acquired to acquirer with “a massive Rolodex” of targets, he boasts. Previously, the studio was simply trying to make “ends meet,” balancing a push for Triple-A polish while “keeping the lights on.” Now, thanks to the buyout, Karch barely has any worries. Since signing the deal, Karch’s life has changed. It was the perfect start for a company that perhaps needed to justify its acquisition price of approximately $525 million.
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Importantly for Karch, Evil Dead: The Game is the first major title Saber Interactive has released since he sold the 600-employee studio to Swedish video game conglomerate Embracer Group in February 2020. While it was met with enthusiastic if not Metacritic-topping reviews, the game was a hit, topping the PlayStation 5 sales chart in the U.S. The 50-year-old-crew cut and leaning forward over Zoom with a square jaw that makes him look like an action figure-has just overseen the release of online multiplayer horror shooter Evil Dead: The Game. Matthew Karch, CEO of Florida video game studio Saber Interactive, is riding high.