# StormRegion

> Hungarian video game developer

**Wikidata**: [Q649297](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q649297)  
**Wikipedia**: [English](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StormRegion)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/stormregion

## Summary
StormRegion was a privately held Hungarian video game developer founded in 1997 and headquartered in Budapest. The studio produced titles including Rush for Berlin, became part of the German company 10tacle Studios on 2007-06-04, and was dissolved on 2008-08-01.

## Key Facts
- StormRegion was founded in 1997.  
- StormRegion was dissolved on 2008-08-01.  
- StormRegion became part of 10tacle Studios (start time: 2007-06-04).  
- Headquarters: Budapest.  
- Industry: video game industry; instance_of: video game developer.  
- Legal form: privately held company.  
- Notable product: Rush for Berlin.  
- Official website: http://www.stormregion.com.  
- External identifiers: freebase ID /m/02q2cc6; videogamegeek company ID 13663; Crunchbase organization ID stormregion; pc-games-database.de company ID 349.  
- Wikimedia presence: Wikipedia entries in multiple languages (de, en, es, et, hu, pl, ru) and sitelink_count 7.

## FAQs
### Q: What was StormRegion?
A: StormRegion was a Hungarian video game developer, privately held and headquartered in Budapest, founded in 1997 and dissolved in 2008.

### Q: What games did StormRegion make?
A: StormRegion produced titles including Rush for Berlin. (Rush for Berlin is listed as a product associated with the company.)

### Q: Was StormRegion part of a larger company?
A: Yes. StormRegion became part of the German developer 10tacle Studios with a recorded start time of 2007-06-04.

## Why It Matters
StormRegion represents a documented example of a Central European independent studio active during the late 1990s and 2000s. Its operation from 1997 until dissolution in 2008 places it within a formative period for regional studios entering international markets and collaborating with larger publishers or groups. The studio’s inclusion in 10tacle Studios in mid-2007 and its listed product Rush for Berlin provide concrete reference points for researchers tracking corporate consolidation, studio lifecycles, and product portfolios in the video game industry. As a Budapest-based, privately held company with multiple Wikipedia entries and entries in industry databases (Freebase, Crunchbase, VideoGameGeek, PCGamesDatabase), StormRegion is a verifiable entity for studies of company identification, cross-border ownership, and the history of European game development in that era.

## Notable For
- Producing the game Rush for Berlin.  
- Being founded in 1997 and operating until formal dissolution on 2008-08-01.  
- Joining the German developer 10tacle Studios on 2007-06-04.  
- Being a privately held video game developer headquartered in Budapest.  
- Presence across multiple public databases and multilingual Wikipedia entries (sitelink_count 7).

## Body
### Overview
- Name: StormRegion.  
- Instance of: video game developer.  
- Industry: video game industry.  
- Legal form: privately held company.  
- Headquarters: Budapest.

### Corporate timeline
- Inception (founded): 1997.  
- Part of 10tacle Studios: start_time 2007-06-04.  
- Dissolved: 2008-08-01.

### Products and output
- Notable product listed: Rush for Berlin.

### Location and ownership
- Headquarters located in Budapest.  
- Became part of the German game developer 10tacle Studios on 2007-06-04.

### Online presence and identifiers
- Official website: http://www.stormregion.com.  
- Freebase ID: /m/02q2cc6.  
- VideoGameGeek company ID: 13663.  
- Crunchbase organization ID: stormregion.  
- PCGamesDatabase.de company ID: 349.  
- Wikimedia presence: Wikipedia titles in German, English, Spanish, Estonian, Hungarian, Polish, and Russian; sitelink_count 7.  
- LastDodo area ID: 456697 (as recorded).  

### Classification data
- Instance_of: video game developer.  
- Industry classification: video game industry.  
- Legal form recorded as privately held.

## References

1. LastDodo
2. Freebase Data Dumps. 2013
3. VideoGameGeek