Game developers and tech professionals networking in a modern London event space with large windows showing the London skyline during the DevMix 2026 event

Not every meaningful industry event needs a three-day agenda, a keynote stage, and a five-figure registration fee. Sometimes the most productive thing a developer can do is spend eight hours in a room with the right people and walk out with a handshake that actually leads somewhere. That is the pitch behind DevMix: London, a one-day pop-up networking event on February 19 that is quietly carving out a lane in the UK’s game development calendar by keeping things lean, focused, and unapologetically PC-centric.

A One-Day Format Built for Actual Conversations

DevMix: London runs from 10 AM to 6 PM at a single London venue, with ticket prices ranging from £25 to £300 depending on your tier. At the low end, that is roughly the cost of lunch in central London and a Zone 1 day pass. At the high end, you are still spending less than a single night at the Aria during DICE week. The economics alone tell you something about who this event is designed for and what it values.

The format skips the traditional conference playbook. There are no hour-long keynotes or sprawling expo halls. Instead, DevMix leans into roundtables, high-level networking sessions, and short talks that are explicitly described as “kept light.” The emphasis is on connection over content consumption. For an industry that has spent the last two years watching major conferences balloon in scope while the actual deal-making still happens in side rooms and hotel lobbies, there is something refreshing about an event that just cuts to the chase.

Why a PC-Focused Event Matters Right Now

The PC-specific framing is the detail worth paying attention to. While most industry networking events cast a wide net across platforms, DevMix narrows its lens to PC gaming, hardware innovation, and the ecosystem of studios, publishers, and tech companies that orbit around the platform.

That focus is well-timed. The PC gaming landscape in 2026 is in an interesting place. Steam continues to dominate digital distribution with record concurrent user counts. Handheld PC devices have created an entirely new hardware category that did not meaningfully exist three years ago. And the relationship between PC hardware manufacturers and game developers is evolving as ray tracing, AI-assisted upscaling, and frame generation technologies become standard expectations rather than premium features. For hardware companies looking to get their technology in front of developers early, and for developers trying to understand what the next generation of PC hardware will enable, a focused event like this fills a gap that broader conferences do not always address.

The attendee mix reinforces this. DevMix explicitly targets five groups: students looking for entry points into the PC sector, indie developers seeking publishing partners and hardware collaborations, studios recruiting talent, publishers scouting titles, and PC tech companies looking to connect with the creative side of the industry. It is a deliberately cross-pollinated room, and the one-day format means everyone is on the same schedule with the same urgency to make their conversations count.

London’s Growing Role in the Industry Calendar

DevMix also speaks to a broader trend in how London is positioning itself within the global games industry calendar. The UK capital has long been home to major studios and a deep talent pool, but its event scene has historically played second fiddle to Cologne, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Events like DevMix, alongside the growing footprint of London Games Festival and EGX, suggest that the city is building a more consistent year-round cadence of industry touchpoints rather than relying on one or two tentpole moments.

For international professionals, the February timing offers a useful waypoint between the Las Vegas cluster of events in early February and the GDC rush in San Francisco in March. For UK-based developers, it is a low-friction opportunity to network without the cost and logistics of transatlantic travel.

DetailInfo
DateFebruary 19, 2026, 10 AM to 6 PM
LocationLondon, UK
FocusPC gaming, hardware, indie, publishing
Cost£25 to £300
FormatOnsite, B2B, one day
RegistrationEventbrite (DevMix PC Tickets)

Who Should Have This on Their Radar

If you are an indie studio with a PC title looking for a publishing conversation that does not require booking a GDC meeting room three months in advance, DevMix is worth the ticket price. If you are a hardware company trying to build relationships with developers outside of the usual trade show circuit, the focused audience here is the point. And if you are a student trying to break into the PC games sector, the £25 early bird tier is one of the lowest barriers to entry you will find at any professional industry event in Europe this year.

The games industry loves to talk about accessibility. DevMix London is quietly practicing it, not through panels about the topic, but through a format and price point that actually lets more people into the room. In an era when the cost of attending industry events keeps climbing, is the scrappy one-day pop-up the networking model that the mid-market actually needs?

1 Comment

  • TIM

    February 8, 2026

    GREAT EVENT !

    Reply

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