Business G/O Media Winds Down by Selling Kotaku, One of Its Last Sites

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G/O Media, the digital media publisher that once owned sites like Jezebel and Deadspin, announced on Wednesday that it is winding down its operations and selling off one of its last properties, the video game website Kotaku.

G/O Media, which is owned by the private equity firm Great Hill Partners, once owned a collection of websites that had belonged to the Gawker Media blog universe and The Onion. But it has slowly been shedding its holdings. With the sale of Kotaku, only one website remains: The Root, which covers Black culture and news.

G/O Media’s chief executive, Jim Spanfeller, said in a statement on Wednesday that “it became clear to our investors that it was time to move on,” alluding to a series of challenges that have faced the digital media industry in recent years.

Publishers have been battling for advertising against tech giants like Google and Meta, while generative A.I. is reshaping the media landscape. Investors don’t see a promise of growth in digital publishing in the way they did before the pandemic.

Mr. Spanfeller was quick to say that Great Hill had been “a very good partner” and had “never weighed in on editorial direction.”
“This is in no way a suggestion that Great Hill was in some way acting like a rapacious private equity firm,” he said.

In April, G/O Media sold the business news site Quartz and the commerce site The Inventory to Redbrick, a Canadian software company. In recent years, it also sold off Jalopnik, The Onion, Jezebel, Lifehacker, Deadspin and the A.V. Club. Mr. Spanfeller said that he was still working to find a buyer for The Root, but that G/O Media “will exit having increased shareholder value.”

Mr. Spanfeller, who was frequently at odds with the staff at his publications, also used his letter to attack unions.

“In a number of ways unions have added value to editorial employees’ positions during a time of major change,” he wrote. “But in many more ways the core methods that unions work with (or rather against) companies working hard to change with the times is counterproductive to both their membership as well as the companies as a whole.”

Keleops, a European tech media company, bought Kotaku in an all-cash deal, Keleops’s chief executive, Jean-Guillaume Kleis, said. He declined to disclose the financial details of the sale. The company, which is based in Switzerland, bought the tech site Gizmodo from G/O Media last year.

“We want to build an international media group that is focusing on tech in the very broad sense, and gaming is, I would say, a natural part of that universe,” Mr. Kleis said in an interview.

Kotaku was founded in 2004 as part of what was then Gawker Media, and was acquired by G/O Media in 2019. Mr. Kleis said he had agreed to keep Kotaku’s entire staff as part of the deal, as the company did with the Gizmodo acquisition, and that Keleops did not have any plans “in the short run” to make major changes to its content.

“They have an iconic and very different voice in the gaming industry and this is extremely important to keep for our loyal readers over the past 20 years,” Mr. Kleis said. “And we’ll try to make it even better.”

Mr. Kleis said the purchase of Gizmodo in June 2024 had gone smoothly and the company would soon introduce a new version of the site. He said that Keleops had doubled the audience of Gizmodo in the United States in the past year and quadrupled it globally. According to Comscore data from May, Gizmodo had 8 million unique visitors in the United States and 15 million from the rest of the world.

Keleops has offices in Paris and New York, as well as Zug, Switzerland. Along with Gizmodo, it runs the consumer tech sites Journal du Geek, 01net, Presse Citron and iPhon, and has more than 40 million monthly unique visitors across those sites, according to a news release.

Mr. Kleis said he was continuing to look at other acquisition targets in the United States, as part of expansion into the country.

Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/02/business/media/kotaku-go-media-sale.html

Archive: https://archive.ph/1ilhj
 
Press release from their website attached.
NEW-YORK / JULY 2, 2025
Keleops group, a global leader in high-tech media with more than 40 million monthly
unique visitors worldwide, has completed the acquisition of Kotaku from G/O Media in
an all-cash asset deal. This strategic move builds on Keleops’ bold vision, strengthens
its position as a leader in the digital media sector and further reinforces its U.S.
presence—one year after the successful integration of Gizmodo.
Kotaku, launched in 2004, is a trusted and acclaimed voice in gaming, known for its wide reach,
engaged community, and honest and sometimes edgy perspectives. Through its website, social
media platforms, and widely read newsletter, Kotaku benefits from a high-value audience and keeps
its community very engaged.
“We are thrilled to welcome the entire Kotaku team to Keleops,” Says Jean-Guillaume Kleis, CEO and
co-founder. “Kotaku isn’t just a brand—it’s a home for gamers and a place where the culture keeps
moving forward. We are honored to shape its future and make such an iconic gaming brand part of
our family, as part of our bold vision for Keleops and ongoing U.S. expansion.”
With this acquisition, Keleops increases its leadership in the U.S. market, the core of its growth
strategy. Kotaku brings a complementary audience to Keleops’ existing readership, increases the U.S.
scale, and unlocks new commercial and technical synergies. This move confirms Keleops’ continued
commitment to empower and grow independent media brands, while strengthening its unique lead-
generation-based business model for a wide range of tech industry partners.
“Organic growth and strategic acquisitions are fundamental for us to stay ahead of the game,” Kleis
adds. “This sets us apart and creates real long-term value for our audience and partners. We remain
committed to our bold expansion plan, looking for new opportunities and expanding our portfolio, with
a clear goal of being world-class in the tech media landscape.”
Keleops has proven its expertise in growing media brands organically through its notable success
with Gizmodo, where the global audience quadrupled in just one year—driven by unparalleled know-
how and onboarding of new senior talent. “Building on our astonishing success with Gizmodo thus
far, we are committed to taking Kotaku to the next horizon, reinforcing its status as a must-read for
gamers and anyone curious about gaming.” Concludes Kleis.
ABOUT KELEOPS
Keleops is a leading international high-tech media
group with offices in Zug (Switzerland), New York
(USA), and Paris (France). The company owns and
operates a portfolio of influential digital media
brands across technology, gaming, and digital
lifestyle sectors, serving a global audience of
more than 40 million monthly unique visitors.
Known for its expertise in digital publishing,
audience growth, and strategic acquisitions,
Keleops is recognized as a key consolidator in
the industry, empowering independent media
brands and delivering value to both audiences
and commercial partners worldwide.
For more information, visit : www.keleops.com
Press Kit: https://bit.ly/3HU0XJ1
For media inquiries, please contact:
US :
Maryse Camelan
maryse@pressario.us
(+1) 425 985 2121
Europe :
Hortense Grégoire
hortense@pressario.us
(+33) 06 08 33 89 88
ABOUT KOTAKU
Founded in 2004, Kotaku is a leading voice
in video game journalism, delivering honest
and insightful coverage of gaming culture and
industry developments.
Renowned for its engaged audience, Kotaku
reaches 3 million monthly users in the US
(Comscore) and boasts a social media community
of more than 4 million followers. The platform’s
blend of news, reviews, and interactive features
has established it as an essential destination for
gamers and enthusiasts worldwide.
For more information, visit : www.kotaku.com
 

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Rest in piss, now to gut and shutter it completely
I will fly the green and purple just for that one day again, just so I can piss all over it's grave
gg2 he mad.webp
Perfect way to cap off this image
 
I have a bottle of champagne ready to pop when Kotaku finally shutters for good. I’m hoping I get to pop the bubbly soon.

Alyssa Mercunty and company can die in a sewer.
Funnily enough, Kotaku is arguably the initial catalyst for me discovering KF. I was a wee retard on the Internet and browsing around. Saw a website about games and would occasionally check up on it since it a different source of information and I didn't really know better. Then there was Goober Gobber and none of the articles ever articulated WTF it was. Somehow ended up looking at r/KotakuInAction to get a better explanation. That was kinda wishy washy since it was in Reddit and therefore pozzed, but I recall Kiwi Farms being mentioned a handful of times. Lurked, yada yada yada, and that's that. TY Kotaku! Very cool!
They were directly related to Jezebel and The Root too.
There was also Gizmodo, Jalopnik, and ofc, Deadspin.

I vaguely recall Gizmodo having an entire situation where they managed to acquire a new iPhone model (I think) that someone left at a bar which led to Apple suing them.

Deadspin had the whole Manti Te'o fiasco which is double insane considering how that entire media conglomerate progressed.

- tl;dr on that stor: An elite college football player got galaxy-leveled catfished. The catfish allegedly died and he was crying about her in a post-game interview. Catfish turned out to be some gay dude that was in love with Manti and Deadspin was heavily implying Manti was a secret homo and knew about it the entire. Crazy shit.

Jalopnik was auto-themed IIRC.. It has been years and years and years since I've looked back at any of it, but that one seemed awesome. No idea if it got pozzed (maybe it was pozzed and I didn't notice?) or what ended up happening there.
 
Mr. Kleis said he had agreed to keep Kotaku’s entire staff as part of the deal, as the company did with the Gizmodo acquisition, and that Keleops did not have any plans “in the short run” to make major changes to its content.

“They have an iconic and very different voice in the gaming industry and this is extremely important to keep for our loyal readers over the past 20 years,” Mr. Kleis said. “And we’ll try to make it even better.”
Can't wait to see how poorly this ages.
Mr. Kleis said the purchase of Gizmodo in June 2024 had gone smoothly and the company would soon introduce a new version of the site. He said that Keleops had doubled the audience of Gizmodo in the United States in the past year and quadrupled it globally. According to Comscore data from May, Gizmodo had 8 million unique visitors in the United States and 15 million from the rest of the world.
How many of those are bots and/or clicks by accident?
 
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Jalopnik was auto-themed IIRC.. It has been years and years and years since I've looked back at any of it, but that one seemed awesome. No idea if it got pozzed (maybe it was pozzed and I didn't notice?) or what ended up happening there.
It got pozzed, friend of mine who's into cars a bit more than me said it eventually became all about EVs and mid 2010's list-o-mania articles that were just passed-around lists from other sites that were full of repeated basic factual mistakes and hard left political biases.

Top 10 worst cars ever made: Number 1? The Ford Model T for putting "the world on wheels" and being direct responsible for the murder of a million Middle Eastern children a year for cheap oil!
 
I assume you mean Gizmodo? Gizmondo is some old handheld that I assume inspired the name Gizmodo. Your question is probably yes either way though.
I think that was an autocorrect flub. Gizmodo is what I meant to put.
 
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