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Krafton files new papers as it fights to convince the court to compel a forensic examination of former Unknown Worlds' founders' devices
Esports

Krafton files new papers as it fights to convince the court to compel a forensic examination of former Unknown Worlds’ founders’ devices

by admin September 25, 2025


Krafton has filed two further legal documents after the founders and former leadership team of Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds successfully blocked Krafton’s request for a court-ordered protective order to force the founders to turn over their devices for a forensic inspection.

New court papers sent to GamesIndustry.biz show that following the hearing on September 12, Krafton filed a combined motion seeking relief and opposition to the founders’ motion to compel. The company also shared an affidavit from the MD of Alvarez & Marsal’s Forensic Technology Services practice who was retained by Krafton to “identify, collect, and analyze electronically stored information (ESI) and perform forensic analysis in connection with the case.”

Details of the legal complaint against Krafton, Inc. by the former leadership of Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds became public in July. The complaint concerns a $250 million bonus payout tied to revenue targets for the 2025 Early Access release of Subnautica 2, which the former shareholders of Unknown Worlds Entertainment, represented by Fortis Advisors LLC, allege owners Krafton, Inc. sought to avoid paying out by delaying the game using “pressure tactics.”

In its defense, Krafton accused the three former leaders of then threatening to self-publish Subnautica 2, “releasing it without Krafton’s backing, marketing, promotion, or distribution.” This, Krafton claims, left it with “no choice but to terminate their employment,” along with allegations that Max McGuire, Ted Gill, and Charlie Cleveland downloaded tens of thousands of “company files” and emails in the lead up to these terminations. The founders strenuously deny this, and claim the publisher “chang[ed] its story mid-litigation about why it fired the founders and seized control over Unknown Worlds.”

Now, the affidavit from A&M said it “observed numerous downloads within a short period of time occurring in June and July 2025,” indicative of a “mass download of complete folders and their contents from Google Drive.”

However, in its most recent filing, the founders’ deny wrongdoing, claiming they had an “absolute right” to “copy” the files as directors of the company.

In these latest papers, Krafton also stressed it “even offered to extend the earnout period if the Key Employees would come back to work. The Key Employees refused, threatened to self-publish Subnautica 2, and – anticipating their termination – stole hundreds of thousands of Unknown Worlds and Krafton confidential documents before they were fired, presumably in furtherance of their plan to unilaterally self-publish Subnautica 2 and capitalize on the earnout.”

In a statement to GamesIndustry.biz, a Krafton spokesperson said: “Krafton’s latest filings continue to highlight the former executives’ misconduct. Despite offering to extend the former executives’ earnout period if they returned to their positions, the former leaders refused to return to work, threatened to prematurely self-publish Subnautica 2, and stole hundreds of thousands of Unknown Worlds and Krafton confidential documents on their way out the door.

“Krafton will continue to present the evidence showing how the former executives violated their obligations and misused company resources, as the legal proceedings move forward. As Krafton has continued to make clear, at the heart of every decision Krafton makes are the fans, who deserve the best possible experience. Through this process, Krafton remains focused on what matters: delivering the best possible game to Subnautica’s fans.”

Read our timeline of the former Subnautica 2 leads versus Krafton here.



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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Founders of Subnautica 2 studio Unknown Worlds accuse parent company Krafton of "changing story mid-litigation"
Esports

Founders of Subnautica 2 studio Unknown Worlds accuse parent company Krafton of “changing story mid-litigation”

by admin September 18, 2025


The founders and former leadership team of Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds have successfully blocked Krafton’s request for a court-ordered protective order, claiming the publisher “chang[ed] its story mid-litigation about why it fired the founders and seized control over Unknown Worlds.”

New court papers from September 12 and seen by GamesIndustry.biz confirm the court dismissed Krafton’s forensic inspection request, without prejudice, and also denied Krafton’s order compelling preservation, calling the request “unnecessary.” Both parties are now expected to meet and confer.

Details of the legal complaint against Krafton, Inc. by the former leadership of Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds became public in July. The complaint concerns a $250 million bonus payout tied to revenue targets for the 2025 Early Access release of Subnautica 2, which the former shareholders of Unknown Worlds Entertainment, represented by Fortis Advisors LLC, allege owners Krafton, Inc. sought to avoid paying out by delaying the game using “pressure tactics.”

In its defense, Krafton accused the three former leaders of then threatening to self-publish Subnautica 2, “releasing it without Krafton’s backing, marketing, promotion, or distribution.” This, Krafton claims, left it with “no choice but to terminate their employment.”

The company also alleged that Max McGuire, Ted Gill, and Charlie Cleveland downloaded tens of thousands of “company files” and emails in the lead up to these terminations and claimed the former leadership “refused” to return “or at the very least confirm” what devices and confidential information remained in their possession.

Now, the founders claim that while Krafton initially alleged it fired them because of the founders’ “supposed intention to proceed with a premature release of Subnautica 2,” and “withdrawn game readiness as a grounds to justify its actions,” it has now “pivoted to a new theory that it admittedly came up with only after the fact: that it terminated the Founders and seized control because the Founders backed up files they were entitled to access in their work for Unknown Worlds.”

“Krafton’s disorganized retreat raises more questions than answers,” the court filing stated. “To say Krafton’s new theory is a Hail Mary would be an understatement – both because the downloads were not wrongful and because Krafton claims not to have learned of them until after it had fired the Founders. The downloads cannot have been the actual motivation for termination.”

Consequently, lawyers for former CEO Ted Gill, co-founder and creative director Charlie Cleveland, and co-founder and CTO Max McGuire requested that the court deny Krafton’s request for a forensic inspection, as well as dismiss a motion for a protective order on the grounds of its “shift in theories.”

Read our timeline of the former Subnautica 2 leads versus Krafton here.



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September 18, 2025 0 comments
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A gloved hand reaches towards a pile of diamonds
Gaming Gear

Netflix has just dropped a shocking new movie you need to stream after Unknown Number for one simple reason

by admin September 9, 2025



Let’s face it: Unknown Number might just be one of the most memorable Netflix documentaries of all time. When Lauryn and her boyfriend Oliver started getting texts from anonymous numbers that quickly became explicitly threatening, they’d never expected the culprit to be Lauryn’s mom, Kendra. My jaw is still on the floor after the perfectly executed twist two-thirds of the way through the new movie.

Frankly, I’ve been looking for the same documentary-binging high ever since. I didn’t expect to get it so soon, but out of everything new on Netflix in September 2025, another new movie released today (September 8) just might do the trick. In fact, I was already seated purely after reading the synopsis.

Behold: Stolen: Heist of the Century. If you think we’re getting the same whodunnit in the form of Unknown Number’s reveal, you’d be mistaken – if anything, Netflix is now subverting the surprise of its mystery by not only withholding who did it, but how the heist was even pulled off in the first place.

Stolen: Heist of the Century is our next big Netflix documentary movie after Unknown Number

Stolen: Heist of the Century | Official Trailer | Netflix – YouTube

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Let’s set the scene: it’s 2003 in Antwerp, Belgium. The target is the Antwerp World Diamond Centre, housing in the city’s so-called Diamond District with tons of well… you get the idea. Between February 15-16, 2003 a gang of thieves stole loose diamonds, gold, silver and other types of jewelry valued at more than $100 million, with the heist still considered one of “the greatest of the century” to this day.

In true Mission: Impossible style, here’s what our robbers had to get through. The vault that stored the precious gemstones and metals was located two floors below the main floor of the building, protected by multiple security mechanisms. These included a lock with 100 million possible combinations, infrared heat detectors, a seismic sensor, Doppler radar, and a magnetic field. The building itself had a private security force, with the district already heavily guarded and monitored.


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Piece of cake, right? Well, although arrests were made in connection with the case, the stolen diamonds themselves have still never been recovered to this day. As Stolen: Heist of the Century explains, head gang honcho Leonardo Notarbartolo was arrested the Friday following the heist, because nearby garbage had connected him to the scene thanks to DNA found on a salami sandwich.

I’m not going to tell you exactly how our gang pulled off the heist – that’s literally the whole fun in watching the documentary – but what the team manages to do is nothing short of mind-blowing. It’s equally incredible that such a genius team could be so equally idiotic by leaving behind incriminating evidence.

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Even so, Stolen: Heist of the Century is easily up there as one of the best Netflix documentaries for me, and I’ve seen just about everything in its back catalog.

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September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Tomb Raider Developer Crystal Dynamics Lays Off An Unknown Number Of Staff
Game Updates

Tomb Raider Developer Crystal Dynamics Lays Off An Unknown Number Of Staff

by admin August 29, 2025


Tomb Raider developer Crystal Dynamics announced an unknown number of layoffs yesterday, vaguely citing “evolving business decisions,” as the reason. 

The studio shared the news on LinkedIn, writing that the decision wasn’t made lightly and was made to “ensure the long-term health of our studio and core creative priorities in a continually shifting market.”

“To those impacted – we recognize and thank you for your hard work, talent, and passion. We are committed to offering the full extent of support and resources at our disposal during this transition,” reads Crystal Dynamics’ statement.

The message ends with confirmation that the future of Tomb Raider, including an upcoming new title, will be unaffected by the layoffs.

Tomb Raider (2013)

Crystal Dynamics does not elaborate further, but it’s worth noting the studio had been working on the recently canceled reboot of Perfect Dark alongside the game’s primary – and now defunct – developer, The Initiative. It’s hard to imagine this didn’t have some factor in yesterday’s layoffs.

The news comes after the studio laid off 17 employees in March. As of now, Crystal Dynamics, which was acquired by Embracer Group in 2022, has a new single-player Tomb Raider title in the works. First announced in 2022, the project will be published by Amazon Games and built in Unreal Engine 5. We know little about the game beyond this, and a release window is unknown. 

Crystal Dynamics has not shipped a new triple-A title since the polarizing Marvel’s Avengers in 2020, though it collaborated with Aspyr on Tomb Raider I-III/IV-VI Remastered collections, released in 2024 and 2025, respectively, and 2024’s Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver 1&2 Remastered. 



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August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Subnautica 2 studio Unknown Worlds are now suing their former execs for stealing docs and sharing them with the press
Game Updates

Subnautica 2 studio Unknown Worlds are now suing their former execs for stealing docs and sharing them with the press

by admin August 21, 2025


Time for your weekly helping of legal Subnaughtiness. Subnautica developers Unknown Worlds are suing recently departed director Charlie Cleveland, CEO Ted Gill, and studio co-founder Max McGuire for, amongst other things, stealing a bunch of game design files shortly before they were fired.

Or at least, an external legal firm acting on behalf of Unknown Worlds have filed suit. The firm in question – Richards, Layton, and Finger – are also representing parent company Krafton as they defend themselves against an earlier lawsuit brought by Cleveland, Gill and McGuire, who are accusing Krafton of dismissing them unfairly and delaying Subnautica 2’s release to avoid paying out a timed $250 million bonus.

Krafton 100% own Unknown Worlds, and are Subnautica 2’s publisher. So why isn’t this lawsuit coming from them? As PCGamer’s Andy Chalk suggests, the suspicion is that the lawyers have picked Unknown Worlds as plaintiff, rather than Krafton, because they think they’ll get more sympathy that way from Johnny Average Gamer. After all, everybody knows publishers are stinkheads.

A Krafton spokesperson has justified the situation as follows to Chalk: “While Krafton is the parent company, the contracts, intellectual property and confidential information at issue belong to Unknown Worlds. The defendants were executive leadership at Unknown Worlds, and their obligations, including confidentiality and fiduciary duties, were owed to that entity.”

The lawsuit itself broadly reiterates Krafton’s earlier claims that the three banished executives shirked their responsibilities toward Subnautica 2, and that they were only pushing to get the game released this year for the sake of that $250 million bonus (Cleveland, McGuire and Gill stood to receive 90% of it personally, but claim they planned to distribute most of their earnings to the rest of the Unknown Worlds team).

The document is full of redacted bits, excerpts from internal correspondence, and a bunch of screencaps from Reddit that are offered up as evidence that regular Subnautica players think the departed studio executives are at fault. Congratulations, redditor Plebius-Maximus – when they turn all this into a movie, you are probably going to be played by Justin Timberlake.

Cleveland is accused of being first to “stray” by leaving video game development in 2023 to “learn how to produce movies and explore other interests”. The lawyers say that by 2024, he had abandoned “all creative or other leadership roles with the Company”. As for McGuire, he’s said to have “spent 2022 and 2023 buried in the passion project of a new game, Moonbreaker, even well past the time that it became clear that Moonbreaker was a commercial failure”. The lawsuit accuses Gill, the CEO, of doing nothing about these “functional departures from game development of leadership”. It alleges that development “stalled” as a result, resulting in projected release date delays and a “degraded” project scope.

With regard to the much-ballyhooed $250 million “earnout”, the lawsuit accuses the three of trying to “publish whatever they could under the Subnautica 2 name on a timeline” that would ensure they received the money, despite the game falling “far short of the Company’s internally-set expectations for the early access release”. It claims that when Krafton rejected their proposals, the three executives threatened to self-publish Subnautica 2. It was this conversation, the lawsuit claims, that led to Unknown Worlds terminating their employment.

That much, we’ve approximately heard before. But the accusations of stealing documents from the company are new. On June 2nd and June 30th- shortly before he was fired – Gill allegedly exported his entire Unknown Worlds email account, triggering an IT alert. McGuire is said to have downloaded 99,902 company files shortly before his own termination, including documents from Moonbreaker’s development. Cleveland supposedly “downloaded 72,140 Company files” between June 26th and his termination on 1st July, only to be interrupted when Unknown Worlds cut off his access to the system in the course of his firing.

When the mass downloading of files was reported, Unknown Worlds apparently sent a cease & desist letter to the three, demanding that they return any confidential info in their possession. According to the lawsuit, the fired executives at first refused, and then proposed to delete files rather than turn over their devices for inspection. The lawsuit alleges that Gill, Cleveland and McGuire are both using this confidential information in their lawsuit against Krafton, and have also “improperly used or disclosed Confidential Information to members of the press”.

It’s not clear what this last part refers to, but it could be the internal Subnautica 2 planning document that appeared online in July. Krafton were happy to confirm that as authentic, which is understandable given that the document’s mention of stripped-out features supports their case for delaying the game.

You can read all 74 pages of the redacted Unknown Worlds lawsuit on Scribd. All of this is going to chug along for a while longer, I expect. For the moment, I will close by noting that the lawyers accuse Gill, Cleveland and McGuire of carrying out a “trifecta of mischief”, which is a magic phrase and also, sounds like the title of a Bond film. Perhaps they should cast Idris Elba as Plebius-Maximus – on reflection, I’m not sure Timberlake has the starpower for something this high octane. He can play Johnny Average Gamer instead.



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August 21, 2025 0 comments
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Unknown Worlds sues former leadership team for breach of employment and "fiduciary duty of care"
Esports

Unknown Worlds sues former leadership team for breach of employment and “fiduciary duty of care”

by admin August 21, 2025


Unknown Worlds is suing its former leaders Charlie Cleveland, Adam McGuire, and Ted Gill for breach of equity purchase agreement, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, breach of employment agreement, and breach of “fiduciary duty of care” in their capacity as directors.

Parent company Krafton sent GamesIndustry.biz a link to a heavily redacted copy of the filing in which the three former leaders of Unknown Worlds are accused of “openly threaten[ing] Krafton with litigation, and expressly demanding and prioritizing a release date for Subnautica 2, writing: “they demanded the Earnout, not the early access release that would best entice the gaming community into the Subnautica 2 world. Personal (not Company) goals were the priority for [them].”

Details of the legal complaint against Krafton, Inc. by the former leadership of Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds became public last month. The complaint concerns a $250 million bonus payout tied to revenue targets for the 2025 Early Access release of Subnautica 2, which the former shareholders of Unknown Worlds Entertainment, represented by Fortis Advisors LLC – allege owners Krafton, Inc. sought to avoid paying out by delaying the game using “pressure tactics”. The publisher said it had “requested a delay” in releasing the highly-anticipated sequel in early access to “safeguard the quality of Subnautica 2 and maintain player trust.”

This subsequent lawsuit accuses the three former leaders of then threatening to self-publish Subnautica 2, “releasing it without Krafton’s backing, marketing, promotion, or distribution.” This, Krafton claims, left it with “no choice but to terminate their employment.”

The company also alleges that McGuire, Gill, and Cleveland downloaded tens of thousands of “company files” and emails in the lead up to these terminations. “These downloads were, by far, the largest downloads for each of the three Key Employees at any time since at least 2022,” Krafton added, and said the former leadership “refused” to return “or at the very least confirm” what devices and confidential information remained in their possession.

“When pushed, the Key Employees threatened to delete files and again refused to provide access to their devices containing Confidential Information for inspection,” the publisher added.

The 74-page complaint also reiterates Krafton’s former position that Cleveland and McGuire had “checked out” of developing Subnantica 2, leaving Gill unable to “overcome to complete abdication of the Subnautica 2 creative and technical leadership team.”

Read our timeline of the former Subnautica 2 leads versus Krafton here.



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August 21, 2025 0 comments
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