Disco Elysium studio declares ‘resolution’ of legal battle while two of its ousted founders insist the fight continues: ‘they will not silence us’

ZA/UM sent out the triumphant press release a few days before Disco Elysium’s first content update since 2021.

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

On March 14,EurogamerandGamesIndustry.bizreported on a ZA/UM press release that declared the resolution of its legal dispute with founding member and Disco Elysium producer Kaur Kender, while also indicating that Disco Elysium project lead Robert Kurvitz and lead artist Aleksander Rostov’s wrongful termination suit was dismissed over lack of evidence. Since then, Kurvitz and “Sander Taal” (GamesIndustry.biz indicates that this is a pseudonym used by Rostov) have responded, stating that they will continue to pursue legal action. Meanwhile, ZA/UM released Disco Elysium’s first content update since December 2021’s “Jamais Vu” patch.

The ZA/UM saga, in brief

The ZA/UM saga, in brief

This is the first public development in the story since ZA/UM CEO Ilmar Kompus paid €4.8 million back to the company and Disco Elysium producer Kaur Kenderwithdrew his own lawsuit against the developer. In ZA/UM’s initial press release this week, it claimed that Kender has since paid Kompus for his legal fees, and GamesIndustry.biz shared a seemingly contrite message from the writer and entrepreneur:

“I am thankful for the years of trust and cooperation with the team, which made Disco Elysium a successful project,” Kender told GamesIndustry.biz. “After leaving my full-time role, I filed a lawsuit which I realized, after seeing the facts, was misguided.”

ZA/UM further stated that Kurvitz and Rostov’s “unfair dismissal” claim against the company has been dropped due to “lack of evidence,” but this only seems to be part of the full case against it as the company still faces what it characterizes as a “series of baseless allegations from former employees” that will “fall apart under legal and factual scrutiny.”

A representative for Kurvitz and Rostov shared a four-part statement with PC Gamer in response to ZA/UM’s claims. “The press release is wrong and misleading in several respects and seeks to unfairly paint us–Robert Kurvitz and Sander Taal, the remaining minority shareholders in ZA/UM–as mere disgruntled employees,” the statement begins.

Kurvitz and Rostov further deny that their employment claims against ZA/UM were withdrawn due to lack of evidence. “They were not. We see our dismissal as part of a larger campaign against us and will pursue legal options accordingly.”

The pair also note the strange circumstances surrounding the €4.8 million withdrawn and much later returned to ZA/UM by CEO Kompus, the subject of Kaur Kender’s lawsuit. “Kender’s lawsuit was based on the misuse of ZA/UM’s funds (4.8 million euros) by the majority shareholders Kompus and Haavel to increase their own stake in the company.” Kurvitz and Rostov explain. “In the press release, Kompus and Haavel admit to this misuse, arguing only that the money has been ‘paid back to ZA/UM’. Paying back stolen money, however, does not undo the crime; here, it does not undo the majority that Kompus and Haavel have illegally gained in ZA/UM.”

The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals

The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

“Kompus and Haavel silenced Kender on this matter, but they will not silence us,” The pair concludes. “Unlike Kender, we have not participated in the looting of ZA/UM, and Kompus and Haavel have no power over us.”

The final point paints Kender as an adversary of Kurvitz, Rostov, and Hindpere (the latter of whom is not a party to the lawsuit, but has indicated support of her fellow developers). In aMedium postfrom Rostov co-signed by the other two last year, the artist states that the ousting and misappropriation of €4.8 million was “perpetrated by Ilmar Kompus and Tõnis Haavel with support from Kaur Kender, another minority shareholder.”

Two days after the initial press release from ZA/UM, the companyreleased a “collage mode"for the game, a combination photo mode, model viewer, and Garry’s Mod-style sandbox. While innocuous enough on its own, its timing with the new developments in the legal battle over ZA/UM has elicited heated reactions from fans of Disco Elysium.

One of thehighest-rated postson the Disco Elysium subreddit from the past few days uses the new mode to show a corporate stooge character from the game hawking its new feature, while others are encouraging fans to pirate the game. Looking atresponsesto the collage mode announcement on Twitter, many are criticizing it as a tonal clash with the game, or even accusing it of being a distraction from the ongoing legal dispute of Disco Elysium’s ownership. Onereplywas merely a screenshot of character Joyce Messier musing on how critiques of capitalism only end up reinforcing capitalism, drawing a parallel with the game’s politics and current state.

For now, as before, the future of one of ourfavorite games of all timeremains uncertain. ZA/UM is hiring, but it’s unclear how much leeway the studio has with Kurvitz and Rostov still pursuing legal action, while the artists' own path to any sort of victory or reclamation of the IP is murky and no doubt expensive.

Ted has been thinking about PC games and bothering anyone who would listen with his thoughts on them ever since he booted up his sister’s copy of Neverwinter Nights on the family computer. He is obsessed with all things CRPG and CRPG-adjacent, but has also covered esports, modding, and rare game collecting. When he’s not playing or writing about games, you can find Ted lifting weights on his back porch.

FF14 is finally fixing the fact my carefully-constructed portraits keep reverting to a goddamn driver’s licence photo whenever I change my goddamn gear

Dragon Age: The Veilguard’s first patch adds some Mass Effect flair to your wardrobe

Genshin Impact’s missing English voice acting returns in its latest trailer, but players aren’t sure if they should celebrate yet