A new chapter: Founderia acquired
Founderia has been acquired by a technology company focused on persistent systems, human-machine interaction, and long-horizon infrastructure. Founderia will operate as an independent subsidiary with its current leadership team intact.
This is big news, and we want to be direct about what it means and what it doesn't.
What doesn't change: The world continues. Your characters, progress, relationships, and everything you've built remains exactly as it is. There will be no forced migration, no servers going down, no reset. The persistent world you've been part of stays persistent.
Your gameplay experience is unchanged. The content roadmap remains the same. Access pricing remains the same. We're not adding ads, tracking changes, or selling your data differently. The terms of service and privacy policies stay as they are. We're still committed to player agency and moderation by consensus.
What changes: We now have resources we didn't have before. Our parent organization brings expertise in infrastructure that runs at planetary scale, in human-computer interfaces that feel natural, and in thinking in terms of decades instead of quarters.
This means: we can expand the team faster. We can invest in access layers we've been planning but couldn't afford. We can think bigger about what a persistent world means for governance, economy, and human connection. We can promise you that Founderia will exist not just for the next few years, but for as long as players want to inhabit it.
Why we did this: We started Founderia because we believed persistent worlds could exist. We've proven that. One million people have joined the world. Guilds have economies. Stories span years. We've shown that this works.
But showing something works and making it last are different things. To build a persistent world that doesn't disappear when the founder gets tired or a server farm burns down, you need institutional backing. You need people whose job is to think 30 years out. You need the resources to handle growth, to invest in redundancy, to keep the lights on forever.
We found a parent organization that gets this. That wants persistent worlds to exist. That has the patience and the depth to support something that takes decades to mature.
We're still here. We're still building. And now we're building with the resources to do it right. We'll have more to share in the coming weeks. For now: the world continues.