Morris is worth £515m, up £15m from 2019. He made an estimated £450m from the sale of King Digital Entertainment, which is now known as King.com. Riccardo Zacconi and Sebastian Knutsson of King also make the list.
The only new entry to the list for 2020 is Debbie Bushwick, one of only two women. She is the co-founder of Team17, makers of the Worms games, and she made around £48m when she sold half her 44% stake in the company in 2018. Her current £196m fortune is said to be down to the performance of her remaining shares in the company.
In third behind King’s Morris and Zacconi are the Houser brothers Sam and Dan, whose combined £310m worth is from their phenomenally popular creation Grand Theft Auto. Grand Theft Auto V, released in 2013, is the best selling entertainment product of all time.
The remaining entries on the impressive list are Neil Taylor and family of the GAME Digital franchise, David Braben and Wendy Irvin-Braben of Frontier Developments, and Paddy Burns and Chris van der Kuyl of 4J Studios, the studio that produces the Minecraft games.
Robert Watts, the compiler of The Sunday Times Rich List, said: “The explosion of wealth creation in the gaming world typifies the increasingly varied ways Britain’s super rich are building their fortunes. Gone are the days when the Sunday Times Rich List was dominated by money men, industrialists and property tycoons.
“Debbie Bestwick epitomises the march of these self-made men and women, who often come from modest backgrounds and amass their wealth through creating products and services many of us enjoy.”
Here’s the list in full:
(Candy Crush)
(Grand Theft Auto)
(games retailer)l
Henry is Tech Advisor’s Phones Editor, ensuring he and the team covers and reviews every smartphone worth knowing about for readers and viewers all over the world. He spends a lot of time moving between different handsets and shouting at WhatsApp to support multiple devices at once.