Heffay, on 08 December 2014 - 12:52 PM, said:
There's always the possibility of a clawback, but that could be hard to pull off. So many hoops to jump through, and it'll probably take years to affect PGI directly in the remote event that it actually happened. And even then, it would result in just a cash payment; it's not like they'd be able to claw back publishing rights.
PGI may have had a trump card in that they originally gave (or leased) the rights to IGP to be the publisher for MWO. It's possible that IGP was trying to sell the publishing rights to anyone else, but PGI said "eh, we'll just take back the rights if you do, so good luck with that." MWO is useless without the rights to develop it, and with those rights firmly in Russ's grip, IGP failing could have meant he could just take the publishing rights once IGP filed. And then what would Fonds do? Argue that they should have got more money for an asset they couldn't sell?
With apparently 12M at stake in unsecured debt, there is plenty at stake worth suing over. ;-)
While we cannot know what the terms of the original contract were between PGI and IGP, we can, for the sake of entertaining conjecture, posit the following based on what has been researched thus far:
1) 7G borrowed from the Fonds-FTQ and funded IGP with it (which is why there is an apparent double entry between 7G and the Fonds for similar amounts)
2) PGI and IGP signed a developer-publisher agreement where in PGI had "Creative Control" over development of the game, but IGP had the publishing rights which included:
2a) All pricing and marketing decisions
2b) A significant veto on overall development by controlling funding (to wit, Russ' statements on Town Hall and other events explaining delays in CW among other things).
The arrangement I would conjecture that existed is something along the lines of:
a) IGP funded development of MWO and other titles with the money secured from the Fonds
b) With IGP controlling the purse-strings for development, its likely that IGP would have "owned" a significant share of all revenues from MWO.
c) That revenue-share is what would have justified the loan to begin with.
d) We can conjecture that IGP, knowing it was about to go bankrupt, made a sweet-heart deal with PGI; likely to have been a one-time cash settlement against claims for all future revenues that was part of the original contract between them.
IMHO, at issue would be whether that final agreement between PGI and IGP represented a fair valuation for that "asset" -- the contract between them specifying the distribution of future revenues for the MWO product. At the very least, the Fonds should force disclosure via legal process of the details of the transactions in question to decide if pursuing further remedies are justified.
Edited by Kyrie, 08 December 2014 - 02:35 PM.