"I'm sorry, that's a trade secret, no comment."
"..."
Just as expected.
Next.
Around the game company's twenty billion dollar valuation, there was a repeated argument, yet Fighter didn't budge a dime. It was infuriating, but no one gave up.
This was a valuation negotiation.
Only after a universally recognized price emerged would trading begin. Of course, if a company agreed right away, the deal could be done now, but no company was foolish enough to jump out.
Seeing the deadlock.
They gradually shifted their attention to the live broadcasting software, which was not technologically complex compared to "Warfire's" nearly terrifying game update speed that kept players constantly craving novelty.
The live broadcasting software had no real technical challenges from the inside out.
This point.
Fighter also admitted.