Delaware judge rules in favor of Unknown Worlds in Subnautica 2 contract dispute against Krafton, reinstating CEO Ted Gill.
Delaware judge rules in favor of Unknown Worlds in Subnautica 2 contract dispute against Krafton, reinstating CEO Ted Gill.
Image generated by AI

Judge rules Krafton breached contract in Subnautica 2 dispute

Image generated by AI

A Delaware judge has ruled that Krafton breached its contract with Unknown Worlds by firing key employees without cause and seizing control of Subnautica 2. The court ordered the reinstatement of CEO Ted Gill with full authority over the studio and its upcoming early access launch. The $250 million earnout period has been extended to September 15, 2026.

On March 16, 2026, Vice Chancellor Lori W. Will of the Delaware Chancery Court issued a ruling in favor of Fortis, representing Unknown Worlds founders, on phase one claims. The court found that Krafton breached the Equity Purchase Agreement (EPA) by terminating key employees—including CEO Ted Gill, Charlie Cleveland, and Max McGuire—without valid cause via a July 1, 2025 board resolution and by improperly seizing operational control of Unknown Worlds and Subnautica 2. The resolution was declared ineffective to the extent it infringed on Gill’s operational control rights. Krafton must restore Gill’s access to the Steam platform and refrain from impeding his authority over Subnautica 2’s early access launch, granting him full operating authority over the studio and game release plans. Gill was replaced by Steve Papoutsis, who also serves as CEO of Striking Distance. The $250 million earnout—tied to Unknown Worlds’ performance post-2021 acquisition for $500 million equity—has been extended through September 15, 2026, and potentially beyond. The earnout triggers above $69.8 million revenue, paying $3.12 per additional dollar up to the cap. Internal projections predicted 1.67 million copies sold by Q4 2025, yielding $191.8 million to $242.2 million. Court documents revealed Krafton CEO Changhan Kim consulted ChatGPT for strategies to avoid the earnout, including forming “Project X” task force and a “Response Strategy to a ‘No-Deal’ Scenario” with pressure tactics and messaging. Kim feared the deal made him a “pushover.” The court deemed Krafton’s firing justifications—such as abandonment or data theft—pretextual. Phase two litigation on damages remains pending.

What people are saying

Reactions on X predominantly criticize Krafton for breaching the contract by firing Unknown Worlds' CEO Ted Gill without cause to avoid a $250 million earnout, with users highlighting the judge's order for reinstatement and extension of the earnout period to September 2026. Gaming journalists and influencers share the news, noting Gill's restored control over Subnautica 2's early access launch. Some mock Krafton's alleged use of ChatGPT for legal strategy and their statement disagreeing with the ruling. High-engagement posts express support for the developers and skepticism toward Krafton.

Related Articles

Dramatic courtroom scene blending legal ruling with Subnautica 2's underwater world, illustrating early access launch after CEO reinstatement.
Image generated by AI

Subnautica 2 early access set for May after court ruling reinstates former CEO

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Unknown Worlds Entertainment announced Subnautica 2's early access launch for May on PC and Xbox following a Delaware judge's ruling to rehire former CEO Ted Gill. The decision comes amid legal disputes with publisher Krafton over firings and a potential $250 million payout, though Krafton disputes the outcome and plans further litigation.

Lawyers for Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds' reinstated CEO Ted Gill are pushing for publisher Krafton to be found in contempt of court. Krafton confirmed a May early access release for the game a day after a judge ordered Gill's reinstatement with full authority over the studio and its projects. The legal team claims the announcement defied the ruling.

Reported by AI

Subsidiary studios of publisher Nacon, including GreedFall: The Dying World developer Spiders, have filed for insolvency this week amid unpaid bills. French video game union Syndicat des Travailleuses du Jeu Vidéo blames Nacon's management for mismanagement and sabotaging viable teams. The crisis follows recent game launches and Nacon's own debt proceedings.

Riot Games has announced layoffs affecting 80 employees on its 2XKO development team, less than a month after the fighting game's console release. Executive producer Tom Cannon cited insufficient player momentum as the reason for the cuts. Despite the reductions, the game will continue receiving updates.

Reported by AI

Ubisoft's recent company-wide reset has led to the cancellation of six games, studio closures, and a proposed 200 voluntary redundancies in France, prompting unions to vote for strikes. The move includes the scrapping of the long-delayed Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time remake and a price increase for the Just Dance+ service. Shares fell 34 percent, marking the company's lowest value in 15 years.

EA subsidiary Full Circle, developer of the live-service Skate game, announced layoffs on February 25, 2026, as part of a restructuring at its Burnaby headquarters to support the title's long-term development. The cuts affect an unspecified number of staff who contributed to its Early Access launch last September, amid ongoing industry-wide reductions.

Reported by AI

French video game publisher Nacon has filed for insolvency after failing to meet its debt obligations. The company aims to use the procedure to continue operations and renegotiate with creditors while protecting jobs. This follows the recent release of titles like Styx: Blades of Greed and Hell is Us.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline