As Bungie pursues legal action against a player accused of breaking Destiny 2 rules and threatening to "burn down" the studio, its top lawyer says removing bad actors from the game's community is "not only the right thing to do, it is also good business."
Speaking with Axios (opens in new tab), general counsel Don McGowan discussed Bungie's unusually litigious approach to harassment and abuse in its community – and by unusually litigious, I mean that few, if any game studios pursue this kind of behavior in court so aggressively.
"We have seen historically that bad actors will often be tolerated because the people with the skills and power to remove them do not focus their efforts there," McGowan says. "To put it simply, we disagree. In our view, removing harassment and abuse from our community is not only the right thing to do, it is also good business."
"Tolerating bad actors chases away a lot of people who would like to enjoy our products," he added.
McGowan's comments to Axios also touch on the recent wave of harassment that has driven Bungie to reduce communication with players. Community manager dmg outlined the situation in a recent Reddit post (opens in new tab), affirming that "there have been real threats towards our people and our studio" and "we're taking them seriously."
"I will be very clear in saying that I appreciate the studio in the amount that it's helped me personally after some serious harassment towards me and my family," dmg said. "I'm taking time off in part because of this. Just because you can't see it directly in a given tweet or forum reply doesn't mean that it didn't happen."
This followed a separate wave of harassment targeting Destiny 2 sandbox lead Kevin Yanes, who pulled back from
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