The experiment was a typical early-2010s MMO partnership: ambitious, cross-regional, and ultimately short-lived. For players who experienced Rusty Hearts or Dragon’s Prophet , it was a nostalgic blend of anime aesthetics and dungeon grinding. For Arc Games, it was a learning experience that pushed them toward self-published and Western-developed titles.
For a player in 2012–2013, an meant:
| Game | Status | Notes | |------|--------|-------| | Rusty Hearts | (2015) | Private servers exist (e.g., Rusty Hearts Reborn), but no official version. | | Dragon’s Prophet | Shut down (2016) | Runewaker’s IP now only active in Asia. | | SUN (Soul of the Ultimate Nation) | Shut down (2014) | Webzen later revived it briefly, but Arc version gone. | | Arc Games launcher | Still active | Now called Arc Games (rebranded 2021). No G+ references remain. | arc g+ games
Arc Games decided to focus on in-house developed titles ( Neverwinter , STO ) and third-party indie games, dropping Korean licensed MMOs entirely. The experiment was a typical early-2010s MMO partnership:
Based on the phrase , this most likely refers to Arc Games (formerly known as G+ Games or Gala Games in specific contexts, or potentially a typo for Arc Games ). For a player in 2012–2013, an meant: |