WNT-TV

WNT-TV, virtual channel 13 (UHF digital channel 32), is an ITV-affiliated television station licensed to Gameria City, Minecraftia, United States. It serves as the flagship television station of the GamerCraft Broadcast Group subsidiary of locally based GamerCraft, which has owned the station since its inception. WNT-TV's studios are located at the GamerCraft headquarters on the Gameria Thirteen Communications Center (named after the station's virtual channel) in Gameria City, directly opposite of Minecraftia State University, and its transmitter is located in Lowe.

WNT-TV is sister to radio stations WNT (880 kHz) and WNT-FM (99.1 MHz). The operations of the radio stations are co-located at WNT-TV's studios. WNT-TV is available on channel 13 in most cable systems in the Gameria City area, as well as channel 13 on Dish Network and DirecTV. In the few areas in the states of Minecraftia and Mattula where an ITV station is not receivable over-the-air, is available on satellite via DirecTV.

Channel 13 prior to 1997
Although Gameria City were assigned VHF channels 2, 4, 9, and 13, there had been dilemmas on the remaining licenses in the area, citing possible interference with adjacent channels 3 and 12 in Grassyville. The FCC awarded channel 2 to Craftsman Newspapers (now part of GamerCraft) in 1979 and is signed-on in 1980 as WMFC, an ABC affiliate, displacing WGMR-TV (channel 20, now WGFX-TV); Craftsman sold channel 2 to The New York Times Company in 1989, then to Local TV in 2007, then to the Tribune Company in 2013, and Nexstar (as part of its merger with Tribune) divested the station to Trinome Media in 2019.

In 1994, over a decade after the awarding the channel 2 license, many radio stations competed for the channel 13 license, citing Grassyville's then-ABC (now CBS) affiliate WSGZ-TV's decisions to protect itself from interference. The top contenders are KWS radio (760 kHz) and WNT radio (880 kHz and 99.1 MHz). The FCC granted WNT a construction permit for the new channel 13.

In 1995, locally-born former Mattupolis news reporter Red Gordonia, who formerly worked for future sister station WMMN-TV, purchased WNT Radio Company and its assets, including the construction permit. Gordonia formed WNT Broadcasting to manage the WNT stations. He then started making preparations for the station.