Wētā Workshop is a creative studio and special effects house based in Miramar, Wellington, New Zealand. The company provides concept design and special effects for film and television. The studio became well known for its Academy Award-winning work on The Lord of the Rings film trilogy.

Beyond its film and television contributions, the company has diversified into video game development, immersive experiences, production of board games and books, creation of large-scale public sculptures, and manufacture of high-end collectibles for fans, alongside operating visitor attractions in Wellington and Auckland.

History

Founded in 1987 by Richard Taylor and Tania Rodger as RT Effects, the company was renamed Weta Workshop in 1993 upon the entry of filmmaker Peter Jackson as a partner. The initial operations of the company were defined by a series of early television projects, notably including the creation of creatures and makeup effects for the series Hercules: The Legendary Journeys and Xena: Warrior Princess. Both businesses are named after the New Zealand wētā, one of the world's largest insects. Macrons were added to the companies' names in 2021.

thumb|The company is named after the New Zealand [[wētā, one of the world's largest insects.]]

Wētā Workshop achieved international prominence for its extensive contributions to director Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit film trilogies, where the studio was responsible for manufacturing the physical sets, costumes, armour, weapons, creatures, and miniatures.

Following success with The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Taylor won a fifth Academy Award in 2006 for Best Visual Effects for his work on Jackson's 2005 remake of King Kong.

Wētā Workshop continued to provide extensive conceptual design and special effects for major Hollywood and international productions. Notable film projects included The Chronicles of Narnia series, James Cameron's Avatar series, Neill Blomkamp's District 9 (2009), Elysium (2013), Chappie (2015), and Denis Villeneuve's Dune (2021) and Dune: Part Two (2024).

Wētā Workshop's video games division was founded in 2014 and has produced numerous games including the augmented reality project Dr. Grordbort's Invaders for Magic Leap and the video game Tales of the Shire.

Wētā Workshop made its American musical theatre debut in 2022 with Workshop designer Rebekah Tisch serving as the art director for the musical stage production of Other World at Delaware Theatre Company, creating a digital world for live stage.

Peter Jackson and Wētā Workshop

Sir Peter Jackson is a co-founder of Wētā Workshop. While the company was originally established in 1987 as RT Effects by Richard Taylor and Tania Rodger, Jackson formally joined the partnership in 1993 to facilitate the production of complex physical effects, costumes, and creatures for his feature film Heavenly Creatures. This collaboration transformed the small operation into Weta (later Wētā) Workshop, which eventually became a cornerstone of the global filmmaking industry through its extensive work on The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit trilogies.

Despite his resignation from the board of Wētā Workshop, Jackson remains the owner of Wētā FX.

Innovations

Chainmail

thumb|[[Hobbiton Movie Set, designed and crafted by the artists at Wētā Workshop]]

For The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, realistic-looking, lightweight chainmail devised by creature, armour, and weapons art director Kayne Horsham was made for the lead actors and for the hundreds of extras that appeared in the films. PVC pipe was cut into rings, assembled by hand into a semblance of armour, and then electroplated. A total of 82.9 million links were manufactured from of PVC pipe. Lord of the Rings actor Viggo Mortensen nicknamed the chainmail 'Kayne's-mail' after its inventor. Horsham later improved his chainmail creation technique and patented it as Kaynemaile. It produces aluminium or steel chainmail for high-impact stunt work.

alt=People applying material to a person's face to make a mold|thumb|A technician at Wētā Workshop performs a life-cast to create a mould of a face

Bigatures

The term 'bigature' is Wētā Workshop's nickname for a very large miniature model. They were used in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, with the largest model measuring some tall. Extensive computer graphics techniques and computer-controlled cameras were used to seamlessly mesh the bigature photography with live actors and scenes.

Bigatures used in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy included models of:

  • Rivendell – Elrond's city for the Elves
  • Caras Galadhon – Galadriel's city in Lothlórien
  • Argonath – the gateway into Gondor, two statues of Elendil and Isildur
  • Helm's Deep – the mountain fortress of the Rohirrim
  • Osgiliath – the ruined City of Gondor
  • Minas Tirith – the White City of Gondor
  • Orthanc – Saruman's tower
  • Cirith Ungol – the tower that guards the pass of Shelob
  • Minas Morgul – Sauron's 'Dead City'
  • Barad-dûr – Sauron's massive tower
  • The Black Gate – the gate guarding the gap between the Ered Lithui and the Ephel Dúath
  • Grond – the battering ram that smashed down the gates of Minas Tirith

Wētā Workshop Game Studio

In 2012, Wētā Workshop expanded its operations by establishing Wētā Workshop Game Studio, a division focused on developing original interactive titles and providing conceptual design services for the video game industry. In 2018, Weta Gameshop, described as possibly "the world's first specialist mixed reality development studio", was opened in partnersip with Magic Leap. In the field of mixed reality and emerging technology, the studio developed the award-winning title Dr. Grordbort's Invaders, a flagship augmented reality action game created specifically for the Magic Leap platform.

Regarding its work on Middle-earth projects, the studio's Design Studio provided extensive concept art for Monolith Productions' Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor and its sequel Middle-earth: Shadow of War, specifically influencing the visual identity of characters, weaponry, and environmental assets. The division also internally developed Tales of the Shire, a cosy life-simulation game that allows players to experience the daily lives of hobbits within the world of J.R.R. Tolkien.

The studio has also contributed significant design work to the Call of Duty franchise, including providing character and world concept design for Call of Duty: Vanguard and developing character and weapon skins for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare.

Sculptures and large-scale installations

thumb|right|Wētā Workshop sculpture created for the [[2011 Rugby World Cup in Wellington]]

In addition to its work in film and television, Wētā Workshop maintains a division focused on public and private commissions, specializing in large-scale sculptures and museum exhibits. This department applies cinematic fabrication techniques, such as high-detail prosthetics and structural engineering, to permanent physical installations.

thumb|right|The United Kingdom memorial at [[Pukeahu National War Memorial Park]]

The workshop’s private and institutional commissions range from bespoke bronze statues for individual collectors to collaborative projects with corporate and governmental organisations. These include design and fabrication for the Traditional Chinese Medicine Cultural Experience Center in Zhuhai and the redevelopment of the National Aquarium of New Zealand in Napier.

For the 2016 film Warcraft, Wētā Workshop collaborated with Madame Tussauds to create an immersive experience featuring a life-sized figure of the Orc chieftain Durotan, which stood over seven feet tall and was constructed using more than 90 silicone molds and yak hair to achieve a realistic appearance. They also produced a massive bronze statue of the character Orgrim Doomhammer for the Blizzard Entertainment headquarters in California, the developer of the Warcraft video game franchise.

A significant portion of their museum work is represented by the Gallipoli: The Scale of Our War exhibition at Te Papa, which features human figures crafted at 2.4 times natural scale.

thumb|right|13-metre-long [[Gollum sculpture at Wellington Airport]]

The company's public work includes various urban projects, such as the 2011 Rugby World Cup sculpture in Wellington and several significant memorial and collaborative art projects across New Zealand and abroad. At Pukeahu National War Memorial Park, the workshop fabricated the United Kingdom Memorial, which features intertwined bronze trees representing the Royal Oak and the pōhutukawa. In Gisborne, the workshop crafted a life-sized bronze tribute to Murray Ball's Footrot Flats comic strip, featuring the characters Wal and Dog.

thumb|right|15-metre-long Manu Muramura sculpture installed at Wellington Airport

The workshop is also responsible for the "bigature" Middle-earth displays at Wellington Airport, which include a 13-metre-long sculpture of Gollum created to promote the release of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. In August 2025, the facility expanded its presence at the terminal with the unveiling of Manu Muramura, a 15-metre-long illuminated sculpture installed above the main concourse. Developed in collaboration with artist Manukorihi Winiata, the artwork replaced the airport's previous The Hobbit-themed eagle sculptures, which had been a fixture of the terminal for 12 years alongside the Gollum installation. The new installation is based on a Māori legend about a local water spirit (taniwha) whose spirit is said to have ascended in the form of a bird.

Collectibles

Sideshow Weta Collectibles (2001–2005)

Sideshow Weta Collectibles operated as a joint venture between the American manufacturer Sideshow Collectibles and Wētā Workshop.

Formed in 2001 to capitalise on the release of The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, the partnership combined Wētā’s authentic film-prop expertise with Sideshow’s global distribution and marketing infrastructure. The collaboration is best known for producing high-end polystone statues, busts, and prop replicas that set a new industry standard for cinematic accuracy and detail.

The formal partnership between Sideshow Collectibles and Weta Workshop concluded on July 1, 2005, allowing both entities to pursue independent creative and commercial interests. To mark the end of the collaboration, the final product released was a 1:6 scale polystone statue of director Peter Jackson. The figure depicted Jackson in his cameo role as a Corsair of Umbar from the film The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.

Wētā Workshop collectibles (since 2009)

Wētā Workshop re-established its independent consumer products division in 2009 following the conclusion of its joint venture with Sideshow. The studio produces high-end collectibles designed and sculpted by the same artists who create props and practical effects for major film productions.

Wētā Workshop’s consumer products division includes several distinct lines of collectibles derived from its work in film and television. The Masters Collection consists of large-scale, limited-edition statues produced with an emphasis on technical detail and complex character arrangements. These mixed-media figures are often hand-painted by the same artists who work on the studio's film sets to ensure a high level of craftsmanship.

The Classic Series features 1:6 scale polystone statues from franchises such as The Lord of the Rings, Stranger Things, and Avatar. Additionally, the studio produces Mini Epics, a line of stylized vinyl figures, and Prop Replicas created using the original digital and physical assets from film production.

Publications

Wētā Workshop operates as a specialist publisher and book packager, producing highly detailed volumes that document the technical and artistic processes of film production. Unlike standard licensed tie-ins, these books are authored and designed in-house by the studio's own concept artists, ensuring a high degree of accuracy regarding the props, costumes, and creatures created for the screen.

The studio's bibliography is most notably defined by the Chronicles series, a multi-volume collection detailing the design history of The Hobbit film trilogy. In addition to film-related media, Wētā Workshop publishes original intellectual property, such as the satirical Dr. Grordbort's series. The company typically utilises a co-publishing and distribution model, maintaining creative control while partnering with international publishers like HarperCollins, Dark Horse Comics, and Titan Books for global retail.

Tours

Wētā Workshop offers several distinct tourism experiences in New Zealand that focus on the artistry of practical film effects and prop manufacturing.

Wētā Workshop Experiences, Wellington

The tour is located at the Wētā Workshop headquarters in Miramar, Wellington. Guided tours, which first opened to the public in 2012, provide a look into the workshop through viewing windows where visitors may observe staff at work on current productions. The experience displays authentic props, costumes, and weapons from various film franchises, including The Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, Avatar, and District 9. Visitors can also view "bigatures," which are large-scale miniatures used to film expansive cinematic landscapes. During the tour, guides describe the transition of a project from a concept sketch to a finished physical prop. Photography is restricted in specific areas of the tour space due to the presence of active film productions and intellectual property requirements.

In 2025, the Wētā Workshop Experience was rated by Lonely Planet as one of the top ten visitor activities in Wellington.

The Wētā Cave, Wellington

thumb|right|Sign outside the Wētā Cave in Wellington, a museum and giftshop owned by Wētā Workshop

The Wētā Cave serves as the public entry point for the company's Wellington headquarters, functioning as a retail space, mini-museum, and cinema. Entry to the Cave is free of charge, which allows visitors to view a variety of collectibles and prop replicas without a tour ticket.

The exterior is marked by three life-sized stone trolls, which are frequently used as a landmark for photography. Inside, the mini-museum displays artifacts from various film productions, including The Chronicles of Narnia and King Kong. A 17-minute documentary detailing the company’s history and the work of founders Richard Taylor and Peter Jackson is screened regularly.

The retail area carries a range of products, from themed apparel and pins to limited-edition statues and handcrafted prop replicas. Staff are available to provide information regarding the items on display, many of which were created by the same artists who work on the film sets. The interior also features several large-scale character sculptures, such as Gollum and Lurtz, which are available for public viewing.

thumb|Costumes and armour designed by Wētā Workshop for [[The Lord of the Rings (film series)|The Lord of the Rings film trilogy at the Wētā Cave in Wellington]]

Wētā Workshop Unleashed, Auckland

Wētā Workshop Unleashed is a tourism attraction located at the SkyCity precinct in Auckland's central business district, which officially opened to the public on December 15, 2020. The experience is designed as a narrative-based journey exploring the creative process through three film genres: horror, fantasy, and science fiction. Visitors are introduced to the tour by an animatronic character before being guided through various sets styled to appear as active film productions. Unlike the Wellington studio, photography is permitted throughout this facility.

The tour includes several large-scale installations, such as a five-meter-tall robot and a fantasy castle environment. Interactive elements allow guests to operate puppets, use digital mirrors to view prosthetic effects, and enter a themed laboratory. The horror section includes a walk-through set, with an alternative route provided for those who wish to bypass that specific area. Although the featured projects are fictional, the tour demonstrates the practical effects techniques used by the company in major film productions.

The Auckland site also hosts scheduled workshops where participants can learn technical skills such as special effects makeup and miniature construction.

The Wētā Cave, Auckland

The Wētā Cave Auckland is the retail and reception hub for the Wētā Workshop Unleashed. Similar to the Wellington branch, it functions as a themed environment that is free for the public to enter without a tour ticket. The store is characterized by large-scale displays, including giant trolls and a sleeping dragon, which serve as focal points for photography.

The inventory includes a wide range of authentic collectibles, prop replicas, and movie memorabilia designed by the same artists who work on major film productions. The retail area specifically features a curated selection of high-end statues, art prints, apparel, and jewellery inspired by the workshop's cinematic projects.

Workplace culture

Beginning in June 2020, an investigative project by New Zealand public TV broadcaster 1News into Wētā's workplace culture resulted in over 11 current and former Wētā Workshop employees anonymously sharing accounts of bullying and harassment.

Another former employee, Layna Lazar, went public with her own allegation by posting on social media in the same month that she had been sexually harassed repeatedly, saying that after seeking recourse, she was fired. This prompted an independent review by Hive Consulting in December of 2020. Their reviewer Ashley Benefield cleared the company of the allegations, stating that "the majority of allegations in the post including the most serious allegations, have either not been substantiated or were reasonable in the context of circumstances not described in the post". The review's December 2020 report did not address the anonymous allegations of over 11 employees originally reported by 1 News back in July, and the employees concerned stated that they were not informed of the review having finished, in spite of their cooperation with it.

Live-action films

This is a list of projects featuring the conceptual design, prosthetics, armour, and physical effects work of Wētā Workshop.

1980s

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

|-

|1989

|Meet the Feebles

|}

1990s

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

|-

|1992

|Braindead

|-

|rowspan="2"|1994

|Heavenly Creatures

|-

|Once Were Warriors

|-

|rowspan="2"|1996

|The Frighteners

|-

|Genius

|-

|rowspan="2"|1997

|The Ugly

|-

|Contact

|}

2000s

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

|-

|2001

|The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring

|-

|2002

|The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

|-

|rowspan="5"|2003

|Peter Pan

|-

|Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World

|-

|The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

|-

|The Last Samurai

|-

|Perfect Strangers

|-

|rowspan="2"|2004

|Hellboy

|-

|Van Helsing

|-

|rowspan="5"|2005

|The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

|-

|King Kong

|-

|Kingdom of Heaven

|-

|The Legend of Zorro

|-

|Antarctic Journal

|-

|rowspan="3"|2006

|Black Sheep

|-

|The Host

|-

|Eragon

|-

|rowspan="5"|2007

|Bridge to Terabithia

|-

|30 Days of Night

|-

|Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer

|-

|The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep

|-

|Rogue

|-

|rowspan="6"|2008

|The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian

|-

|Blackspot

|-

|Love Story 2050

|-

|Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

|-

|The Day the Earth Stood Still

|-

|Outlander

|-

|rowspan="6"|2009

|The Lovely Bones

|-

|Under the Mountain

|-

|District 9

|-

|Avatar

|-

|Aliens in the Attic

|-

|Bitch Slap

|}

2010s

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

|-

|rowspan="7"|2010

|The Devil's Rock

|-

|Daybreakers

|-

|The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

|-

|Yogi Bear

|-

|Clash of the Titans

|-

|Robin Hood

|-

|Gulliver's Travels

|-

|2011

|Rise of the Planet of the Apes

|-

|rowspan="4"|2012

|The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

|-

|Battleship

|-

|John Carter

|-

|Mr. Pip

|-

|rowspan="5"|2013

|The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug

|-

|Elysium

|-

|The ABCs of Death

|-

|Man of Steel

|-

|The Last Days on Mars

|-

|rowspan="8"|2014

|The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies

|-

|Dracula Untold

|-

|The Amazing Spider-Man 2

|-

|Edge of Tomorrow

|-

|Transcendence

|-

|Godzilla

|-

|Hercules

|-

|Exists

|-

|rowspan="7"|2015

|Krampus

|-

|Mad Max: Fury Road

|-

|I

|-

|Chappie

|-

|Furious 7

|-

|Zhong Kui: Snow Girl and the Dark Crystal

|-

|Poltergeist

|-

|rowspan="9"|2016

|Remo

|-

|Spectral

|-

|League of Gods

|-

|The BFG

|-

|Rise

|-

|Warcraft

|-

|Gods of Egypt

|-

|Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice

|-

|The Great Wall

|-

|rowspan="4"|2017

|Blade Runner 2049

|-

|Power Rangers

|-

|Thor: Ragnarok

|-

|Ghost in the Shell

|-

|rowspan="7"|2018

|2.0

|-

|Rampage

|-

|The Meg

|-

|Mortal Engines

|-

|Pacific Rim Uprising

|-

|A Wrinkle in Time

|-

|Zhong Kui: The Demon Hunter

|-

|rowspan="8"|2019

|The Wandering Earth

|-

|Alita: Battle Angel

|-

|I Am Mother

|-

|Men in Black: International

|-

|Sweetheart

|-

|Jumanji: The Next Level

|-

|Godzilla: King of Monsters

|-

|Haunt

|}

2020s

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

|-

|rowspan="2"|2020

|Bloodshot

|-

|Mulan

|-

|rowspan="2"|2021

|Mortal Kombat

|-

|Dune

|-

|rowspan="8"|2022

|X

|-

|Thor: Love and Thunder

|-

|Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

|-

|Avatar: The Way of Water

|-

|M3GAN

|-

|Spiderhead

|-

|Samaritan

|-

|Pearl

|-

|rowspan="8"|2023

|Cocaine Bear

|-

|The Wandering Earth 2

|-

|The Creator

|-

|Foe

|-

|Rebel Moon - Part One: A Child of Fire

|-

|Meg 2: The Trench

|-

|The Tank

|-

|Renfield

|-

|rowspan="11"|2024

|Dune: Part Two

|-

|Alien Romulus

|-

|Y2K

|-

|Gladiator II

|-

|Harold and the Purple Crayon

|-

|Apartment 7A

|-

|Rebel Moon – Part Two: The Scargiver

|-

|Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

|-

|Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire

|-

|MaXXXine

|-

|Sting

|-

|rowspan="6"|2025

|Tron: Ares

|-

|Predator: Badlands

|-

|Avatar: Fire and Ash

|-

|M3GAN 2.0

|-

|Death of a Unicorn

|-

|The Electric State

|-

|rowspan="3"|2026

|Wicker

|-

|Project Hail Mary

|-

|The Odyssey

|}

Animated films

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Studio(s) and Distributor(s)

|-

|2007

|Beowulf

|Paramount Pictures<br />Warner Bros. Pictures

|-

|2011

|The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn

|Paramount Pictures

|-

|2017

|Justice League Dark

|Warner Bros. Animation

|-

|2024

|The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim

|New Line Cinema<br />Warner Bros. Animation

|}

Documentaries

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Studio(s) and Distributor(s)

|-

|2009

|Reclaiming the Blade

|Galatia Films

|-

|2012

|West of Memphis

|WingNut Films<br />Sony Pictures Classics

|-

|2024

|Never Look Away

|General Film Corporation<br />Greenwich Entertainment

|}

Shorts

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

|-

|1992

|Valley of the Stereos

|-

|2007

|Halo 3: Landfall

|-

|2008

|Eel Girl

|-

|2017

|Zygote

|}

Television

This is a list of projects featuring the conceptual design, prosthetics, armour, and physical effects work of Weta Workshop.

1990s

{| class="wikitable"

!Year

!Series

!Network

|-

|1990–1992

|The Ray Bradbury Theatre (Season 4–6)

|USA Network

|-

|1991

|The Boy from Andromeda

|TVNZ

|-

|1993

|The Tommyknockers

| ABC

|-

|1995–1999

|Hercules: The Legendary Journeys

|rowspan="2"|Syndication

|-

|1995–2001

|Xena: Warrior Princess

|-

|1998–1999

|Young Hercules

|Fox Kids Network

|}

2000s

{| class="wikitable"

!Year

!Series

!Network

|-

|2000–2001

|Cleopatra 2525

|Syndication

|-

|2005

|The Fairies

|Seven Network

|-

|2005–2006

|Jane and the Dragon

|YTV

|-

|2006–2008

|The Killian Curse

|TVNZ 2

|-

|2009–2011

|The WotWots

|TVNZ

|}

2010s

{| class="wikitable"

!Year

!Series

!Network

|-

|2015

|The Expanse (Season 1)

|rowspan="2"|Syfy

|-

|2015

|Childhood's End

|-

|2015–2020

|Thunderbirds Are Go

|ITV

|-

|2016–2017

|Cleverman

|ABC

|-

|2016–2017

|The Shannara Chronicles

|MTV, Spike

|-

|2018–2019

|Kiddets

|TVNZ

|-

|2019

|Fast & Furious Spy Racers

|Netflix

|}

2020s

{| class="wikitable"

!Year

!Series

!Network

|-

|rowspan="2"|2020

|Altered Carbon (Season 2)

|Netflix

|-

|Book Hungry Bears

|TVNZ 2

|-

|2021–present

|Foundation

|rowspan="2"|Apple TV+

|-

|rowspan="2"|2021

|Invasion (Season 1)

|-

|Jupiter's Legacy

|rowspan="2"|Netflix

|-

|rowspan="3"|2022

|Love Death + Robots (Volume 3)

|-

|Obi-Wan Kenobi

|Disney+

|-

|The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power (Season 1)

|Amazon Prime Video

|-

|rowspan="3"|2024

|Beacon 23 (Season 2)

|MGM+

|-

|Time Bandits

|rowspan="2"|Apple TV+

|-

|Sunny

|-

|rowspan="3"|2025

|Secrets at Red Rocks

|Sky Open

|-

|Chief of War

|Apple TV+

|-

|Alien: Earth

|FX, FX on Hulu

|}

Television films and specials

{| class="wikitable sortable"

!Year

!Films

!Network

|-

|1995

|Forgotten Silver

|TVNZ 1

|-

|1997

|Tidal Wave: No Escape

|ABC

|-

|1998

|A Soldier's Sweetheart

|Showtime

|-

|2009

|Skyrunners

|Disney XD

|-

|2011

|Tangiwai: A Love Story

|TVNZ 1

|}

Music videos

{| class="wikitable"

|+

!Year

!Name

!Artist

|-

|2026

|Children of the Sun 太陽之子

|Jay Chou

|}

Video games

2010s

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Platforms

|-

|2011

|Team Fortress 2 (Dr. Grordbort’s Game Assets)

|Windows, Linux, macOS

|-

|2013

|Dota 2 (Replica Weapons)

|Windows, Linux, macOS

|-

|2014

|Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor

|PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Windows, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Linux, macOS

|-

|2015

|Grey Goo

|Windows

|-

|2017

|Middle-earth: Shadow of War

|PlayStation 4, Windows, Xbox One

|-

|2018

|Dr. Grordbort's Invaders

|Magic Leap

|-

|2019

|Dr. Grordbort’s Boosters

|Magic Leap

|-

|2019

|Call of Duty: Modern Warfare

|PlayStation 4, Windows, Xbox One

|}

2020s

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Platforms

|-

|2021

|Call of Duty: Vanguard

|PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S

|-

|2023

|Combonauts (unreleased VR project)

|Meta Quest

|-

|2024

|Off the Grid

|PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox Series X/S

|-

|2025

|Tales of the Shire: A The Lord of the Rings Game

|PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch, iOS, Android

|-

|2025

|Sleep Awake

|PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox Series X/S

|}

Board games

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Publisher

|-

|2018

|GKR: Heavy Hitters

|Cryptozoic Entertainment, Wētā Workshop

|-

|2019

|District 9: The Boardgame

|Wētā Workshop

|-

|2020

|The Hobbit: An Unexpected Party

|Wētā Workshop

|}

Expansions

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Publisher

|-

|rowspan="2"| 2018

|GKR: Heavy Hitters – Urban Wasteland Expansion

|rowspan="2"|Cryptozoic Entertainment, Wētā Workshop

|-

|GKR: Heavy Hitters – Sweet & Salty Factions Expansion

|-

|rowspan="2"|2021

|District 9: The Boardgame (Mothership Kickstarter Pledge)

  • District 9: The Boardgame – Faction Expansion
  • District 9: The Boardgame – District Boost Deployable Ally Pack

|Wētā Workshop

|}

Publications

This list includes publications produced by Wētā Workshop as the primary creator and packager, it excludes general "making-of" books where the studio was merely a contributor or subject.

2000s

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Publisher

! Distributor

! ISBN

|-

| 2003

| The Lord of the Rings: Weapons and Warfare

|rowspan="5"| Wētā Workshop

| HarperCollins

| 978-0007172016

|-

| 2005

| The World of Kong: A Natural History of Skull Island

| Pocket Books

| 978-1416502586

|-

|rowspan="2"| 2008

| Doctor Grordbort's Contrapulatronic Dingus Directory

| Dark Horse Books

| 978-1593078768

|-

| The Crafting of Narnia

| HarperCollins

| 978-0007270583

|-

| 2009

| Dr. Grordbort Presents: Victory

| Dark Horse Books

| 978-1595824639

|}

2010s

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Publisher

! Distributor

! ISBN

|-

| 2010

| The Art of District 9: Weta Workshop

|rowspan="13"| Wētā Workshop

| HarperCollins

| 978-0062064301

|-

|rowspan="2"| 2011

| The Art of The Adventures of Tintin

| HarperCollins

| 978-0062087492

|-

| Wētā: The Collector's Guide

| Wētā Workshop

| 978-1869509293

|-

| 2012

| The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - Chronicles: Art & Design

| HarperCollins

| 978-0007487332

|-

|rowspan="2"| 2013

| The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - Chronicles: Creatures & Characters

| HarperCollins

| 978-0062265685

|-

| The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - Chronicles: Art & Design

| HarperCollins

| 978-0062265692

|-

|rowspan="5"| 2014

| The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - Chronicles: Cloaks & Daggers

| HarperCollins

| 978-0007525775

|-

| Smaug: Unleashing the Dragon

| HarperCollins

| 978-0007525782

|-

| The Art of Film Magic: 20 Years of Weta

  • Celebrating 20 Years of Creativity
  • 20 Years of Imagination on Screen

| HarperCollins

| 978-0007588596

|-

| Dr. Grordbort Presents: Onslaught

| Titan Books

| 978-1782761914

|-

| The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies - Chronicles: Art & Design

| HarperCollins

| 978-0062265715

|-

| 2015

| The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies - Chronicles: The Art of War

| HarperCollins

| 978-0007546534

|-

| 2017

| Middle-earth from Script to Screen:<br>Building the World of The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit

| Harper Design

| 978-0062486141

|}

2020s

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Name

! Publisher

! Distributor

! ISBN

|-

| 2022

| Gallipoli: The Scale of Our War

|rowspan="2"| Wētā Workshop

| Te Papa Press

| 978-1991150950

|-

| 2025

| The Art of The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim

| HarperCollins

| 978-0008713041

|}

References

  • Wētā Workshop
  • Wētā FX